Waddani
Party of Somaliland was founded in 2012. Its MPs in Somaliland Parliament
belonged to Udub, which was dissolved in 2011 and UCID on whose ticket Waddani
Party Chairman secured parliamentary speakership before resigning in
2017.
In a short period of time Waddani turned out to become an usually progressive
party championing, among other causes, rights of minorities, more female MPs,
constitutional reform and decentralisation. Those themes distinguish it from
the ruling party, Kulmiye.
Waddani garnered 40% of votes cast during 2017 presidential elections. That is a remarkable achievement for a party in competition with a well-funded and older party. Many Kulmiye supporters accuse Waddani of undermining Somaliland democratic processes by not agreeing to timeframe to hold parliamentary elections. The evidence to back up this claim does not hold water. Who should take responsibility for Somaliland not escaping the unflattering assessment by electoral observers that the political system’s weakness lies in being “over-reliant on a customary system to solve problems, and with representative electoral institutions not yet fully capable of supporting the transition to a stronger nation-state.” If Somaliland political parties remain reluctant to observe electoral rules, why should they commit voters to a polarising election cycle yet again?
While on tour in the United Kingdom last year Waddani Chairman, Abdirahman Mohamed Abdullahi, discussed challenges the party is facing of which competing with a ruling party using public resources is the most pressing. Kulmiye took the decision to hold parliamentary and presidential elections separately several years ago. The party leadership might have reasoned, without explicitly stating, that 2017 presidential elections could split the electorate along clan lines. Waddani’s political programme based on decentralisation and accountability chimed with constituencies not allied with the party chairman clanwise.
Waddani Party Chairman at a meeting with party supporters
Without substantive changes to electoral rules Waddani will find it hard to justify to its supporters the democratic necessity to hold parliamentary elections. Any changes to electoral rules should not leave citizens in doubt that Kulmiye will not abuse its mandate to deepen distrust caused by misuse of public resources for political ends. The presidential system of Somaliland is not based on the percentage of votes won by a ruling party to form a majority government. A ruling party can govern without holding an absolute majority of parliamentary seats. In the last 2005 parliamentary elections Kulmiye, then an opposition party, won 28% of seats but 49.50 % of votes cast during 2010 presidential elections. The democratic deficit in Somaliland institutions benefits Kulmiye.
Reflecting on how democracy fared in East European countries Professor Mark Lilla said that political elites had put in place democratic institutions without democratic citizens. Election observers’ observations on the mismatch between democratic institutions and reliance upon a customary system in Somaliland bears out Professor Lilla’s judgement.
In a 1986 Time magazine essay the late editor-in-chief Henry Grunwald summed up the logic of democracy: If I rob my neighbour today, he will rob me tomorrow. My neighbour’s possessions are just as important as public resources to which we both contribute to ensure delivery of many services including the administration of justice. This common understanding constitutes one of the foundations of democracy.
Somaliland political institutions are at a crossroads. Waddani
may not give in to pressure from Kulmiye to agree to a parliamentary elections schedule.
If it does, there is no guarantee that Waddani will not win 40% of
parliamentary seats. If Somaliland were governed on the basis of seats
won during 2005 parliamentary elections a coalition government would have been
in place by now. Kulmiye exploited ambiguities after the dissolution of Udub,
the party it unseated in 2010. Kulmiye has increased the number of its
MPs who haven’t won a seat on the party’s ticket.
Kulmiye’s goal to perpetuate the dysfunctional
Somaliland political system through parliamentary elections without addressing
causes of democratic deficit and polarisation gives Waddani reasons to stand
back and reflect on a failing political experiment. At a question and answer
session of a public lecture given by Professor Ahmed Samatar in Hargeysa three
weeks ago, a young man posed the following question: how can the practice of
giving jobs and other opportunities to less competent candidates be
curbed? Professor Samatar, who is a Kulmiye party member but is critical of the
direction taken by the Somaliland government, did not answer it.
Liban Ahmad
libahm@gmail.com
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