Africa News of Friday, 14 February 2020
Source: africanews.com
Somali president Mohamed Abdullahi Farmaajo has made admissions on military excesses in Somaliland under the era of former president Siad Barre.
His comments on Thursday came three days after what Mogadishu called an “ice-breaking” meeting with Somaliland president Muse Bihi. The meeting in Addis Ababa was brokered by the Ethiopian Prime minister Abiy Ahmed.
Speaking at a judicial conference on Thursday, Farmaajo averred that the civil war didn’t start in 1991 but well before that claiming many lives in northern regions (Somaliland).
“We are here now, what is needed is where we go from here, it is go towards justice. What is needed is acknowledgment in seeking forgiveness for the bad things that have happened, to correct the dark chapter in our history, which means to express regret for the suffering in the north.
“To express regret, to apologize to our brothers, those who died and those maimed, to say to them that what happened was bad history, it is in the past. Indeed what happened there was not like the south invading the north, it was not based on clan, it was a government system that existed at the time.
“As the head of State, to express regret, and to convey our apologies to our northern brothers and you join in that regard with me.”
Twitter reactions to Farmaajo’s admission
The admission by the president who faces reelection later this year received mixed reactions on Twitter. Some people are quick to point out that he is not the first president to apologize, that his predecessor Hassan Sheikh Mohamud is on record to have made similar admissions.
Whiles some say an admission is not an apology, others hold that it is a bold first step and an official apology will likely follow in due course.
I welcome President Farmajo's apology over the massacres committed by the former military regime against our brothers in Somaliland in the name of our nation. We demand to apologise the killing of the soldiers at Wadajir Party HQ who were buried in a mass grave under his rule.
— Abdirahman Abdishakur (@AAbdishakur) February 13, 2020
This will not bring back the hundred thousand killed and millions displaced but its its very good step, and milestone for the somaliland-somalia talks. I have underlined in my yesterday interview the difficulties to talk to genocide deniers and sympathizers. #Somaliland #Somalia https://t.co/QTYZO3cVZi
— Ayan Mahamoud MBE (@Gobannimo) February 13, 2020
I profoundly & wholeheartedly welcome & support the brave initiative of Presdnt @M_Farmaajo on behalf of the people of Somalia to Formally apologize to the people of Northern Somalia /Somaliland for the crimes & atrocities committed in the late 1980s by the previous regime pic.twitter.com/hDsisDvF4N
— Amb. Awale Kullane (@Awalekullane) February 13, 2020
@M_Farmaajo state apology is indeed a important step, but the easy part of the equation.
— Hodan Ali (@hodansomali) February 13, 2020
Forgiveness is never comes easy.
Finding hearts & minds to accept will be most difficult.
I pray our bro/sis in Sland can find the courage to finally begin a healing process. #Somalia
Comments by Prez Farmajo on forgiveness for "dark past" with Somaliland very encouraging, positive first step day after meeting Prez Bihi.
— Rashid Abdi (@RAbdiCG) February 13, 2020
Not a full apology for Barre-era atrocities, nonetheless, bold move. Well done.
A full apology will come am sure.https://t.co/Pt5t8dj6xO