Editor’s note: This is the latest in a series of articles on or about Taiwan’s newest diplomatic ally, Somaliland, in north east Africa.

In a raucous session, the Somaliland Parliament has passed the much-anticipated election law without the critical components that were intended to give women and minorities a fair representation in the legislator.A vote on the election bill was scheduled for a vote in the Parliament on September 12th, but was delayed for other debates on bills submitted to Parliament by President Muse Bihi Abdi concerning free trade zones and foreign investment.

The exclusion of parliamentary seat quota(s) in the election is major setback for Somaliland’s women and minority groups who have lobbied the government and political parties extensively.

Somaliland’s capital city

Although some members of the Parliament have objected to the quota on grounds of unconstitutionality, there is nothing in Somaliland’s constitution that prohibits a mechanism that guarantees fair representation for women and minority groups in the country’s parliament.

Setting up a quota for women and minority groups have been in the works for a while, and President Bihi and his cabinet approved a quota allocating 21 seats for women and minority clans in June 2018.

Similarly, all three political parties have expressed support for the quota.

Civil society and community activists have expressed their disappointment in the parliament’s vote against the quota for women and minority groups.

Women and minority groups have been particularly disadvantaged in Somaliland politics where tribal dynamics and numbers play a major role in elections.

The failure of this important feature in Somaliland’s democracy was widely criticized by Somaliland civil society groups and activists.

 

This article first appeared in the Somaliland Chronicle and is republished with permission.

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