Somali parliament ends impeachment motion against president
NAIROBI, Kenya (AP) —
Somalia's parliamentary speaker said he will drop an impeachment motion
against the president and will instead press for talks to end the
country's political crisis.
Somalia's
Speaker of Parliament Mohamed Sheikh Osman gestures, during a meeting
at parliament hall in Mogadishu, Somalia. Somalia’s parliamentary
speaker says he has decided to drop an impeachment motion against the
president in favor of talks to end the political crisis.
Speaker Mohamed Sheikh Osman said he
reached the decision after holding meetings with some of the legislators
who started impeachment proceedings against President Hassan Sheikh
Mohamud. Some of the "clauses in the impeachment motion might have been
erroneously filed and we can rectify them through talks," Osman said in a
statement late Friday.
The development follows calls by the U.N.
to resolve Somalia's political crisis through dialogue. The impeachment
motion was led by former allies of Mohamud who accused the president of
corruption and treason, allegations dismissed by Mohamud.
Mohamud had earlier warned the impeachment
motion threatens the political and security gains made by his
government, which faces a deadly rebellion by the Islamic extremist
rebels of al-Shabab. Amid repeated attacks by al-Shabab, Mohamud said in
July that a nation-wide popular presidential election originally
scheduled for 2016 will not take place. Instead parliament will elect a
president, he said.
At least four people were killed when an
al-Shabab suicide bomber detonated an explosives-laden vehicle at the
gate of the presidential villa in the capital, Mogadishu, on Sept. 21.
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