Electoral Crisis
Underscores Somaliland's Broader Human Rights Concerns

The Somaliland government's
disregard for the law and democratic proc esses threatens the
territory's nascent democracy, Human Rights Watch said in a report
released today. The administration of President Dahir Riya le Kahin
has committed human rights violations and generated a dangero
us electoral crisis.
Eighteen years of progress towards democratic governance and general
respect for human rights will either be consolidated or endangered,
depending on President Riyale’s next moves.
Georgette Gagnon, Africa director at Human Rights Watch
The Human Rights Watch report, "‘Hostages to Peace': Threats to
Human Rights and Democracy in Somaliland," says that Somaliland's
government has helped create a measure of stability and democratic
governance even as Somalia has remained mired in armed conflict. But
Somaliland's gains are fragile and currently under threat. The
administration of President Riyale has regularly flouted
Somaliland's laws and has twice delayed elections that were
originally scheduled for April 2008, through processes of
questionable legality. A further delay of elections, now slated for
September 2009, could prove disastrous for democratic rule in
Somaliland.
"Somaliland has spent 18 years trying to build stability and
democracy, but all its gains are at risk if the government continues
to undermine the rule of law," said Georgette Gagnon, Africa
director at Human Rights Watch. "The electoral crisis has laid bare
the need to create functioning government institutions that will
respect human rights."
The Human Rights Watch report is based primarily on a two week visit
to Somaliland in March 2009 in which researchers interviewed
government officials, opposition leaders, civil society activists,
local analysts, and victims of human rights abuses.
Somaliland declared its independence from Somalia in 1991 after the
demi se of Somalia's last functioning government. No country has
recogni zed Somaliland's claim of statehood. Human Rights Watch
takes no position on whether Somaliland should be internationally
recognized as an indepen dent country. But international
actors should engage more deeply with Somaliland, press Somaliland's
government to respect human rights and the territory's emerging
democratic norms, and provide assistance tailo red to bolster
key government institutions, the media, and civil socie ty.
In recent years the Riyale administration has regularly treated the
oppo sition-controlled legislature as an irritant, refusing to
respect its role in the legislative process or in overseeing opaque
government expenditures. Little has been done to build the capacity
of the nominally independent judiciary; the lower courts are often
incapable of applying the law while the Supreme Court has acted as
though it is entirely beholden to the pre s ident.
Government actions in violation of domestic and international law
have directly infringed upon the rights of Somalilanders, Human
Rights Watch said. The Riyale administration has circumvented the
courts and trampled on the rights of criminal defendants by relying
on "security committees" that are entirely under the control of the
executive and that have no legal basis under Somaliland law. The
security committees sentence and imprison Somalilanders, including
people accused of common crimes and juveniles, without any pretense
of due process. They regularly sentence defendants en masse on the
basis of little or no evidence after truncated hearings in which the
accused are given no right to speak. When Human Rights Watch visited
Mandhera prison outside of Hargeisa in March, over half of the
prisoners there had been sentenced by the security committees, not
the courts.
The government has also engaged in other repressive practices that
are common in the region, but relatively rare in Somaliland. A
former driver for the president's family was imprisoned after
publicly accusing the first family of corruption, and only released
after photos surfaced of the man lying shackled to a hospital bed,
gravely ill. The leaders of a dissident political association called
Qaran, which challenged the existing three parties' legal monopoly
of electoral politics, were sentenced to prison terms and banned
from political activity, though they were released before serving
their full terms. And Somaliland's leading independent human rights
group was dismantled during a leadership struggle in which
government officials blatantly intervened.
But patterns of low-level harassment targeting journalists,
opposition activists, and others are the most common. On numerous
occasions government officials have detained, usually for brief
periods, individuals who have publicly criticized the government or
provided press coverage deemed to be unfavorable.
Somaliland's precarious situation in the region has deterred
Somalilanders from protesting loudly when their rights are abused
for fear of damaging their territory's hard-won stability and its
quest for international recognition. Many people told Human Rights
Watch that they are effectively "hostages to peace" - unable to
confront Somaliland's deepest problems effectively for fear of
upsetting the fragile balance that has kept the territory from going
the way of Somalia and other countries in the region.
The repeated delay of Somaliland's presidential election threatens
the foundations of its emerging democratic system. President Riyale
has twice been granted lengthy extensions of his term by
Somaliland's unelected House of Elders. The election is currently
scheduled for September 29, but there is considerable uncertainty
whether it will take place and under what circumstances.
"Somaliland is at a dangerous crossroads," Gagnon said. "Eighteen
years of progress towards democratic governance and general respect
for human rights will either be consolidated or endangered,
depending on President Riyale's next moves."
Source: Examiner
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