CPC- PM Rooble meetings explained as a microcosm of Somalia’s power-sharing

By WDM Staff Reporter

The meetings between the council of presidential candidates (CPC) and FGS Prime Minister Mohamed Hussein Rooble was primed to face a technical conundrum. It’s deliberations is similarly bound to end up at a cul-des-ac because the meetings agenda or objectives were clearer in its concealment than in its revelation. So are the participants. As there is more to the faces than they revealed.

The dissection of thses variables could help shade insight into the layered aspects that make the PM Rooble-CPC meeting confounding. For instance, PM Rooble is well understood for who he doesn’t represent than who he represents. He doesn’t represent Farmajo. If he represents anyone, CPC is who Rooble represents. That’s the 4.5 business!.

Through the Decale jungle, Farmajo and CPC were preying on each other using Rooble as bait, or maybe, a Trojan Horse. On this, Rooble would deliver more for Farmajo than for CPC. Also in the mix is a whole deep state infrastructure, whose fate is intertwined with Farmajo. It’s plain Darwinism. CPC threats only alarms the deep state to throw more cordon around Farmajo to cushion him, and by extension, themselves, against CPC power grab.

FGS was awake to this fact. They brought the PM-CPC negotiation as a ploy to buy time and wiggle themselves out of the crisis that was created by the Feb. 19 nightly raid on two former presidents and other opposition candidates to suppress opposition’s anti-government protests.

Relying on the IC to fight its wars, the CPC pressed on them to join the chorus, declaring Farmajo’s continued stay in office beyond Feb. 8 illegitimate, the CPC was short on strategy against a more reticent, strategic and callously conniving FGS. A lethargic and reactionary CPC is too calculating, optimistic, garrulous and reliant on others to do their work for them.

That work was to produce for the CPC, despite not owning the means of production, something along the lines of the June 2008 Djibouti agreement. Unfortunately for the CPC, the ground had shifted on that long time ago. Rooble is no Nur Adde, CPC is no ICU (in composition yes, but not in leverage terms) and, fortunately for Farmajo, it was “being there done that” with his Kampala Accord experience. The more the CPC and allies underestimated Farmajo, the more he shocked them with unmitigated surprises.

Thrown into disarray by the Feb. 19 raid and subsequent FGS quashing of its planned protests, the CPC desperately embraced informally convened reconciliation meetings with the PM Rooble and other fellow constituents. Little did the CPC know that the informal nature of the meeting, which they conveniently mistook as formal, was because PM Rooble was under pressure to prove his worth by saving his position from the encroachment of the constituent that he represents in his position. Little did they also know that they were celebrating prematurely over the outcome of the Feb. 25 agreement at Decale prematurely because, as the bonafide representative of the constituent in the FGS, his apology on the Feb. 19 raid and suppressed protests was personal as opposed to official. With his successful last-minute cancellation of the CPC protests, PM Rooble made his boss satisfied with his efforts. That all the pre-hire tests they had run on Rooble were not in vain.

A series of badly managed messaging on an already anti-climaxed protests made CPC prospects of success not so promising. As the puppeteers of PM Rooble pre-occupied them with intra-constituency feel-good meetings, FGS tacticians have accelerated to the exit of their exit strategy. And Saturday’s eve, the big day of the weirdly so-called FGS-CPC joint protests (for “joint” is how the people understood), CPC was caught yapping. They again made it worse for themselves with their poor messaging about their reasons for canceling the protests. FGS, with its often superior communications, quickly thanked the CPC for responsibly canceling thé planned protests for totally unrelated, but convenient reasons to the ones CPC gave.

Decale was an exercise in deceit from the get-go. The parties were not committed to a treaty without their intentions to gain political advantage over each other and to renege. Such is the level of decadence and the extent that common decency has been eroded.

The CPC and allied FMS are determined to create a level playing field or at least narrow its power deficit with FGS. With the FGS frustrating CPC’s protests, the only means they had to get even with FGS was applying pressure tactics. But their timing was awful, as they were too slow in acting, and their preparation/organization even worse. With that, in all likelihood, the FGS will hold off against CPC protests long enough to make them impotent against the convening of the next national consultative forum to finalize the stalled elections process.

Halane venue is inevitable. But it is going to be neither as important for the CPC and allies as they wanted it to be nor as scary for Farmajo. The patriotic forces’s messaging was responsible for minimizing Halane’s importance as a meeting venue for future national consultative meetings. That message was, “Halane is a Somali territory. A territory that falls under President Farmajo’s jurisdiction.” Secondly, that there is really nothing left to talk about after the technical committee’s Baidoa agreement. All that was left was the formality of the signatories signing the agreement. And that Farmajo can do even in the darkness of the belly of a Beast.

The CPC have been played!

THE GUARDIAN: First Thing: Explosive Meghan interview reveals racism and royal neglect

Meghan said palace had not supported her when she was left feeling suicidal, and had asked how dark her son’s skin would be. Plus, officer charged with killing George Floyd will be tried todayPrince Harry and Meghan talk to Oprah Winfrey

 The Duchess of Sussex said she ‘didn’t want to be alive any more’ following her treatment in the tabloid press. Photograph: Harpo Productions/Joe Pugliese/Getty Images


Molly Blackall


Good morning.

The Duchess of Sussex revealed that she was left with suicidal thoughts as a result of her treatment by the tabloid media and the royal family, and that despite her reaching out for support with her mental health, the palace had failed to protect her. This was one of a number of explosive revelations that came to light during the eagerly anticipated interview between Meghan, Prince Harry and Oprah Winfrey, which aired primetime in the US last night.

Perhaps the most shocking allegation made during the interview was that a member of the royal family had raised concerns with her husband over the skin colour of their baby, with “conversations about how dark his skin might be” taking place while she was pregnant.

Harry also revealed that his father, Prince Charles, stopped taking his calls, and that the family had stopped paying for the couple’s security at the start of 2020 – with this apparently motivating the decision to take on lucrative deals with Netflix. You can read a summary of the key allegations from the interview here, including news that they married in secret three days before their Windsor Castle wedding.

  • Royal commentators were pranked into criticising the couple’s performance before they had seen the interview, with two YouTube stars setting up a fake media company and paying leading commentators, including the Queen’s former press secretary, to give their views days before the interview was broadcast. Some were also duped into discussing false topics supposedly covered in the Oprah interview, including Meghan’s support for a London donkey sanctuary and refusal to have the coronavirus vaccine.

IN MEMORY OF LATE CAPT./PILOT MOHAMUD HAJI ELMI ABDULLE DIRIR (HAJI DHAGAX)

CITY OF GAROWE IN 1968

Garowe, May 6, 2019

“General, I have no decent place to house you in Garowe”, said the junior official representating the Central Government of the Somali Republic, inconveniently posted in Garowe, when General Ainaanshe’s small passenger plane had crash-landed in Garowe airstrip one day in 1968. That tells the story of this city and the extent of backwardness it has been evolving since 1968, and in fact, nothing much had changed for better in the town, until it had luckily become the Capital City of the State of Puntland in 1998.

General Ainaanshe was flying on his way to Hargeisa, the capital city of Northwest regions, when his two-engine plane lost one over Laas Anood, now regional capital of Sool Region. The plane’s pilot was the famous captain Haji Dhagax, now a Puntlander. Garowe airstrip used to be located in what is now a densely residential area in the middle of the City.

According to the captain Haji Dhagax, Garowe had neither a hotel nor a guest house for a visitor to stay overnight. That is why the Government Representative at time was in shock, not because of crash-landing of General Ainanshe’s plane, but his immediate worry about where to find a place to put up the General for the night in Garowe.

While the General was still at Garowe airstrip, someone had to run to the house of Ms. Maryan Muuse Mataan (RIP) to inform her of the new guest’s troubles in town. Maryan quickly took the General and his pilot to her home to smooth up their stay for the following several days – on the top, providing a Land-Rover vehicle and sweet water from her rain-water reservoir at home.

After few days, another plane had flown to Garowe to bring spare parts for the damaged plane and pick up the General to Hargeisa.

Pilot Haji Dhagax, in appreciating for Maryan’s unique home service and hospitality, had made the plane available to her to fly about 50 persons of her choice from Garowe to Mogadishu.

Captain Haji Dhagax was surprised sometime later to see Maryan Muuse Mataan coming out of General Ainaanshe’s Office in Mogadishu. The captain immediately asked Maryan, “Maryan, what can I do for you, anything, please?” She responded, ” thanks, Haji. Look at this big bank cheque to compensate me for your troubles back in Garowe”

ismailwarsame.blog

Author: Warsame Digital Media WDM

FLASHBACK ON SOMALIA’S IMAGES