Issue No. 732

Published 16 Sep 2024

Deni and QoorQoor meet in Galkayo

Published on 16 Sep 2024 14:21 min

Deni and QoorQoor meet in Galkayo 


Over the weekend, the regional presidents of Galmudug and Puntland, Ahmed Abdi Kariye 'QoorQoor' and Said Abdullahi Deni, met in Galkayo to ostensibly discuss peace in Mudug. Amid an upsurge in inter-clan conflict in 2024, the restive region that straddles both Federal Member States (FMS) has particularly suffered, with dozens of deaths attributed to violence between the Sa'ad and Lelakase, among others. The two-day meeting was a positive security-minded move from both presidents to tackle some of the clan issues that cross the Galmudug-Puntland border. But the meeting– the first between QoorQoor and Deni in several months— also comes with the federal government increasingly siloed from the FMS leadership.
 
QoorQoor's meeting with Deni is the second FMS president to signal tacit support for the Puntland leader in as many weeks. Last week, South West State President Abdiaziz Laftagareen insisted that any future National Consultative Council (NCC) be held with Puntland representation, alongside other criticisms of the federal government. Prime Minister Hamza Abdi Barre's subsequent visit to Baidoa proved unable to restore the elite pact between the former and Villa Somalia. For Laftagareen, the federal government's unilateral approach towards replacing the Ethiopian National Defense Force (ENDF) soldiers that those in Bay and Bakool depend upon with Egyptian troops was inexcusable, and he has now broken his relative silence.
 
Although Galmudug will be far less impacted by any Ethiopian military withdrawal than its southern neighbours of Jubaland and South West State, it will still be compromised by any broader security deterioration. In this light, and following several contentious incidents between QoorQoor and Villa Somalia, the meeting with Deni can be understood as a snub to the federal government. He cannot afford to be as brazen as the Puntland leader, as unlike the oldest FMS, Galmudug remains heavily dependent on the largesse of Mogadishu and influenced by the politics of the capital, with its clan makeup predominantly Hawiye. Much of the federal government's Hawiye-dominated administration hails from Galmudug, of whom the sub-clans of the Abgaal, Habar Gidir, Sheekhaal, Duduble, and Murusade comprise the majority.
 
The Galkayo summit also comes as QoorQoor has been seeking to solidify his position within Galmudug ahead of the as-yet unscheduled regional presidential elections that are anticipated to occur before the year ends. Despite the repeat promises of one-person, one-vote polls by the federal government, the long-overdue elections will nevertheless be held using the traditional clan-based system. He has already shuffled his cabinet several times in 2024, in anticipation of a strong challenge from former spy chief Mahad Salad and Liban Ahmed Hassan, aka Liban Shuluuq-- two strong allies of Villa Somalia. Former State Foreign Minister Mohamed Aden Kofi is also expected to throw his hat into the competitive ring.
 
It has been an acrimonious few months in Galmudug, with QoorQoor asserting in early July that unnamed regional politicians were violently mobilising their constituents against each other as part of the electoral manoeuvring for the traditional vote. It was a not-so-subtle allusion to Salad and Shuluq, with whom QoorQoor has a troubled relationship. A hugely wealthy major supplier of the Ma'awiisley, Shuluq was the intended recipient of two truckloads of weaponry from the federal government that were ambushed in Abudwaaq in Galgaduud by Marehaan militias in mid-July– a particularly embarrassing ordeal for Villa Somalia. Salad, meanwhile, belongs to the Ayr– the sub-clan next up in an unofficial rotation pact between the Sa'ad, Sulueiman, and Ayr for the regional presidency. In 2023, during the long-stalled military operations in Gamludug against Al-Shabaab, the controversial former director-general of the National Intelligence and Security Agency (NISA) decamped to Dhusamareb and recruited hundreds of his clansmen to the anger of QoorQoor. The regional president's meeting with Deni is likely a subtle push-back against Villa Somalia's support for Salad and Shuluq.
 
It was not just QoorQoor who arrived in Galkayo with trouble at home. Deni, too, travelled to the city amid an escalating security crisis in Bosasso between the Puntland Security Force (PSF) and his regional administration, which is being represented by the UAE-funded Puntland Maritime Police Force (PMPF). The airport serving the crucial port city has been shut for several days as PSF troops accused the airport's management of refusing medivac to Mogadishu for their injured soldiers. The federal government has been seeking to stoke discontent within Puntland amid their dispute that has stretched beyond 18 months, and there is some speculation that Villa Somalia could be responsible for the latest escalation between the two rival forces.
 
QoorQoor and Deni's meeting can be seen as another shot across the bow to the federal government. Emboldened by international support from Qatar, Turkey, Eritrea, and Egypt, once again, another federal administration has triggered a crisis in the periphery by overlooking the fragile political settlement that sustains the country. The isolation of Puntland and peace in the crippled NCC could only last so long, and it has decisively broken with Laftagareen's intervention and QoorQoor's meeting with Deni. One hopes that pressure from the periphery could bring Villa Somalia back onto a consensus-driven path– but that is unlikely. There is no sign yet that the regional presidents will unify against the Egyptian deployment or the constitutional rewrite, even if they share private misgivings.

By the Somali Wire team

To continue reading, create a free account or log in.

Gain unlimited access to all our Editorials. Unlock Full Access to Our Expert Editorials — Trusted Insights, Unlimited Reading.

Create your Sahan account Login

Unlock lifetime access to all our Premium editorial content

You may also be interested in

Issue No. 952
Fishy Business: IUU Fishing in Somalia
The Somali Wire

With all eyes trained on the Strait of Hormuz blockades and their geopolitical convulsions, discussions and concerns, too, have risen about the perils of other globalised chokepoints, not least the Bab al-Mandab. The threats to the stability of the Bab al-Mandab, the Gulf of Aden, and the Red Sea may not arise principally from the escalatory logic that the US, Iran, and Israel have been locked in, but the threats posed from collapse and contested sovereignty offer little relief. Off Somalia's northern coastline in particular, it is transnational criminal networks — expressed in smuggling, piracy, and, less visibly but no less consequentially, illegal, unreported, and unregulated (IUU) fishing — that define the character of offshore insecurity. It is this last phenomenon that provides the foundation on which much of Somalia's maritime disorder is built, and which remains the most consistently neglected.


21:07 min read 24 Apr
Issue No. 126
Russia in the Horn: Opportunism in an Age of Disorder
The Horn Edition

In the past months, a number of unsettling images and videos have emerged from the Russian frontlines in the Ukraine war. Within the horrors of the grinding "kill zone," where kamikaze drones strafe the sky for any signs of movement, yet another concerning dimension has emerged—the use of African recruits by Moscow in the conflict, often under false pretences. Particularly drawn from Kenya, many reportedly believed they were signing contracts to work as drivers or security guards, only to be shipped to the front lines upon arrival. Such activities are illustrative of several issues, including Russia's relationship with countries in the Horn of Africa, one shaped more by opportunistic realpolitik than genuine partnership.


28:23 min read 23 Apr
Issue No. 951
Federal Overreach in Baidoa Faces Pushback
The Somali Wire

Villa Somalia's triumph in Baidoa may yet turn to ashes. Since the ousting of wary friend-turned-foe, Abdiaziz Laftagareen, in late March, the federal government has ploughed ahead with preparations for state- and district-level elections in South West. Nominally scheduled for next week, President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud has chosen to reward his stalwart parliamentary ally, Aden Madoobe from the Rahanweyne/Hadaamo, with the regional presidency after some vacillation, naming him the sole Justice and Solidarity Party (JSP) candidate


0 min read 22 Apr
Issue No. 328
The TPLF versus the TIA-- again
The Ethiopian Cable

Another showdown over Tigray's political architecture is unfolding, with the future of the Tigray Interim Administration (TIA) once again at stake. For much of this year, fears of renewed war have loomed over Ethiopia's northernmost region, with the federal government mobilising substantial forces to the edges of Tigray.


19:44 min read 21 Apr
Issue No. 950
A City Without Its People
The Somali Wire

In Act III, Scene I of William Shakespeare's tragedy Coriolanus, the tribune Sicinius addresses the gathered representatives and, rejecting the disdain the titular character displays towards plebeians, defends them, stating, "What is the city but the people?" Capturing the struggle between the elite and the masses of ancient Rome, the line has remained politically resonant for centuries--emphasising that a city, democracy, and state rely on the people, not just their leader. Or perhaps, not just its buildings. It is a lesson missed by Villa Somalia, though, with the twilight weeks of President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud's term in office — at least, constitutionally — dominated by the government's twin campaigns in the capital: land clearances and the militarisation of Mogadishu.


20:32 min read 20 Apr
Issue No. 949
The Unravelling of Somalia's Consociational Order
The Somali Wire

On Tuesday, 14 April, the four-year term of Somalia's federal parliament ended, or rather, it didn't. Villa Somalia's (un)constitutional coup of a year-long term extension for the parliament and president in March remains in effect, leaving the institution in a kind of lingering zombie statehood. It is perhaps a fitting denouement for the 11th parliament, whose degeneration has been so thorough that its formal expiration means little in practice.


18:46 min read 17 Apr
Issue No. 125
After Three Years of War, What Is Left of Sudan?
The Horn Edition

Yesterday, 15 April, marked three years of brutal, grinding warfare between the Sudanese army and the Rapid Support Forces (RSF). Wholly neglected by a fading international community, many grim landmarks have been passed; another genocide in Darfur, the weaponisation of rape and starvation, another famine, or the desecration of Khartoum, El Fasher, and other major cities. And with no ceasefire or settlement in sight, the war has continued to swell, drawing in each neighbouring African country as tussling Middle Eastern powers grapple for the upper hand-- leaving Sudan in tatters.


28:01 min read 16 Apr
Issue No. 948
Somaliland's Maritime Security Dividends
The Somali Wire

As global energy markets reel from the partial shutdown of the Strait of Hormuz and war insurance premiums skyrocket by nearly 4,000%, an unlikely maritime security provider is emerging as a critical stabiliser in one of the world's most vital shipping corridors. The Somaliland Coast Guard, operating from the port city of Berbera, has quietly begun providing maritime escort services, seeking to reduce shipping insurance costs—and consequently, the price of commodities and energy for consumers across the Horn of Africa and beyond.


22:19 min read 15 Apr
Issue No. 327
The Afterlife of Swinging Addis
The Ethiopian Cable

Most nights in a number of dimly lit bars in Addis Ababa, one can hear a vibraphone hum over a syncopated bassline. The sprightly rhythm is unmistakably jazz, but the scales are Ethiopian; pentatonic, looping and melodic. Five decades after its pioneering by visionary musician Mulatu Astatke, Ethio-jazz remains in full swing, with its renaissance from the late 1990s persevering despite tough political and cultural conditions.


20:12 min read 14 Apr
Scroll