At a fragile moment for the African Union’s support to the country, Somalia’s weakest link strikes, again
The weakest link in Somalia’s quest to end the protracted conflict is the fragmentation and infighting…

Fighting erupted in Mogadishu between government forces and armed groups loyal to opposition leaders on June 3, 2026, amid a political crisis over the extension of President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud's term.
What was announced
- Political leaders failed to agree on a constitutional amendment and the modality for holding parliamentary and presidential elections.
- Clashes occurred near the residences of former Prime Minister Hassan Khaire and former President Sharif Sheikh Ahmed ahead of a planned protest against the president's term extension.
- Opposition groups reject the constitutional changes that extended the president's term, arguing they were adopted without broad political consensus.
Context
The political crisis stems from the failure to reach consensus on elections after the terms of parliament and the president expired in 2020 and 2021, leading to ongoing fragmentation and infighting among political elites.
“Opponents argue expired in mid-May.”
Why this matters: This situation highlights the ongoing instability in Somalia's political landscape and the challenges faced in achieving a unified governance structure.
Original English report
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Original source text
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The weakest link in Somalia’s quest to end the protracted conflict is the fragmentation and infighting…
The weakest link in Somalia’s quest to end the protracted conflict is the fragmentation and infighting between the political elites of the country. The constitutional revision process and the conduct of elections have become major sites of power struggle and confrontation between rival political elites, although these are not the only sites of confrontation between these elites.
Five years ago, the expiry of the terms of parliament and the president in December 2020 and February 2021 respectively, without any political consensus on the time and modality of elections plunged Somalia into a constitutional crisis and political uncertainty. In a development that mimicked the resultant violent confrontation of April 2021, Somalia’s weakest link struck again as political leaders failed to agree on a constitutional amendment and the modality for holding parliamentary and presidential elections.
On 3 June, fighting erupted in Mogadishu between government forces and armed groups loyal to opposition leaders near the residences of former Prime Minister Hassan Khaire and former President Sharif Sheikh Ahmed. The clashes occurred ahead of a planned protest scheduled for 4 June against the one-year extension of President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud’s term, which opponents argue expired in mid-May. The confrontation continued into 4 June before subsiding following mediated talks.
Source noteWhy this story appears
This report is shown because it came from Warkasta’s monitored source network and matches the current section, recency, and coverage labels.
Why this story appears
This report is shown because it came from Warkasta’s monitored source network and matches the current section, recency, and coverage labels.
- Source count
- 1
- Sources used
- Horseed Media
- Language mix
- English
- Translation status
- Shown in its original language
- AI synthesis
- No AI synthesis is used for this story panel
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