Somalia: Turkey renews mediation efforts as election dispute talks set to resume
MOGADISHU, July 6 – Turkish intelligence envoys have arrived in Mogadishu to jump-start a new bid to resolve Somalia’s election standoff, with negotiations between the federal government and opposition expected to reconvene this week, according to sources familiar with the talks on Monday.
The sources said the Turkish team will first hold separate meetings on Tuesday with committees representing the Federal Government and the opposition. Direct talks are slated to begin Wednesday, this time under the facilitation of Western representatives.
The latest effort follows earlier attempts that stalled, after the opposition’s Somali Future Council refused to participate in Turkey-only talks, arguing Ankara could not serve as a sufficiently neutral broker.
Opposition figures have continued to question whether Turkey can close the widening gap between the rival camps, saying Ankara’s diplomatic leverage is not enough to coax concessions without wider international backing.
Meanwhile, reports indicate Turkish officials, after consultations in Ankara, delivered a bleak assessment to Somali President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud, cautioning that maintaining the current political trajectory without a comprehensive deal before October 2026 would become increasingly untenable.
The reported assessment has not been independently verified, and neither Turkish officials nor Somalia’s presidency have publicly commented on the claim.
The talks form part of broader international efforts to break the impasse over Somalia’s electoral process and head off a deeper political crisis.
AXADLETM







