2017 Somali presidential election


The 2017 Somalia presidential election was held in Somalia on 8 February. Members of parliament elected in the autumn-2016 parliamentary election elected former Prime Minister Mohamed Abdullahi Mohamed to the post of President of Somalia for a four-year term.
The presidential election was to be held in August 2016 and promised to be a one-person, one-vote national poll, but had been postponed several times and shifted to an electoral college system due to security concerns. On 26 January 2017, the election was set for 8 February, with candidates required to register by 29 January. The election was held in an airport hangar at Aden Adde International Airport, Mogadishu.
Mohamed was declared president in a peaceful transition of power after incumbent President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud conceded defeat and congratulated the victor.

Security

Due to the ongoing civil war, security for the ballot was a significant concern. The vote was initially planned to be held at a Mogadishu police academy but was moved to the more secure Aden Adde International Airport, considered as the safest place in Somalia's Capital. On the voting day, traffic was banned in the city, schools were closed and flights to and from the airport were suspended.

Electoral system

, the president was elected by a parliament that had been picked by 135 elders. Plans in 2016–2017 for a full election involving all adult Somalis were scrapped due to security concerns relating to the ongoing civil war. The election costs were 60% funded by donor countries in Europe, the United States and Japan, with the remainder from the Somali government and candidate registration fees.
The president was elected by the 328 members of the Lower House and Upper House of the Somali Parliament. The Parliament's members were elected in the 2016 parliamentary election which itself was limited to 14,025 clan elder-appointed delegates. The election's foreign financiers described the extension of the franchise as a "modest step forward".
The procedure for the election—a form of runoff voting—is outlined in section 89 of the Constitution of Somalia. There were over twenty registered candidates in the first round of voting.

Candidates

A total of 23 or 24 candidates declared themselves, though withdrawals—including that of Abdirahman Mohamed Farole—reduced the field to 21 by the time of the vote. The field included the incumbent President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud, incumbent Prime Minister Omar Abdirashid Ali Sharmarke, former President Sharif Sheikh Ahmed, former Prime Minister Mohamed Abdullahi Mohamed and Somalia's former envoy to Kenya Ambassador Mohamed Ali Nur "Americo" among others.

Results

No candidate achieved the required two-thirds of votes to win in the first round, so the top four candidates advanced to the second round. Omar Abdirashid Sharmarke then dropped out, reducing the field to three candidates. No candidate reached the required threshold in the second round of voting, and third-place Ahmed was eliminated. Hassan Sheikh Mohamud conceded defeat, negating the need for a final vote.
CandidateVotes
Hassan Sheikh Mohamud88
Mohamed Abdullahi Mohamed72
Sharif Sheikh Ahmed49
Omar Abdirashid Ali Sharmarke37

CandidateVotes
Mohamed Abdullahi Mohamed184
Hassan Sheikh Mohamud97
Sharif Sheikh Ahmed45

Bribery

According to a report by the United Nations Security Council, the United Arab Emirates offered cash bribes to influence the election's outcome. Several analysts reported that the meddling in this election was so prevalent, that the Islamist terrorist group Al Shabaab did not try to intervene, because the corruption nearly made them look more appealing to the public by comparison.