AL Jazeera English Inside Story | |||
As the country gears up for a new government we ask if it will be able to overcome corruption and internal conflicts.
Inside Story
Last Modified: 03 Aug 2012 06:52
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After a week-long debate Somalia's National
Constituent Assembly has endorsed a new constitution, marking an end to a
series of transitional administrations over the past 20 years. A new parliament is to be elected by the country's traditional elders, and that body will then choose a president and elect a government.
But many are doubtful that these aims can be achieved in a divided state marked by violence and instability. Despite the approval of the provisional constitution, the country still faces many challenges. Last month a leaked UN report said key leaders at the very top of the transitional government were in corruption. This has boosted the cause of al-Qaeda and al-Shabab in Somalia, seen as a serious threat to peace not only in the country but the region as a whole. All this while Somalia has relied heavily on foreign aid and has been battling poverty.
"The next step is to form a new parliament. Today’s step [the provisional constitution] was a major step in the Somali peace process because it completed one of the major steps in the ending of the transition, that is the adoption of a provisional constitution. "The same elders who selected the delegates today [for the] National Constituent Assembly, will proceed to select the members for a new parliament. This should happen early next week and that parliament will elect the president, the speaker and the deputy speaker on August 20." In this episode Inside Story asks: Will the provisional constitution help deliver peace to a country ravaged by more than two decades of civil war? Is Somalia ready for real democracy? Joining the discussion with presenter Mike Hanna are guests: Muhdin Mohammed Ali, the founder and director of Somali Policy, a political think tank; Abdulkareem Jama, a former information minister and also the secretary-general of Daljir Forum, a group that aims to foster rigorous debate on Somalia's future; and Abdurahman Hosh Jibril, the minister of constitution affairs and reconciliation of Somalia's transitional government.
SOMALIA IN TRANSITION:
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STRIVING FOR THE SAKE OF DINUL ISLAM الدنيـا ساعة فاجعلهـا طاعـة والنفس طماعة فالزمهـا القناعة
Friday, 3 August 2012
Is Somalia ready for real democracy?
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