United Nation engineered and drafted Political Scenario was given to PM, President and the Speaker of the house to study the result of the democratic process before the Copenhagen meeting and it was forwarded for a later response to stake holders to make it seem real. The first task was given to the president to highlight his disagreement with the prime minister without revealing the issue.
The second task was given to the PM to reshuffle his cabinet and to change the position of the president's close friend into a lower ministry job so the president can response by playing the dictator card and by disregarding softer approach to this predicament and choosing to get rid of the Prime Minister through corrupted parliament.
The third task was giving to the Speaker by prolonging the motion and as it plays out keeping the result for further evaluation in accordance with the constitution.
The stake-holders have responded to hint where support lies.
Keep in mind the check and balances the government has to go through in which hassan sheikh talks about indirectly in his speeches and must tune into his latest speech "kaligii talisnimo way dhamaatey". This was response to his camp of supporters who displayed "nin-Jeclaysi" by supporting him.
In conclusion, The PM will make a public statement to highlight the importance of following the constitution while dedicating portion of the speech to the divided parliament. The PM and The President will reconciled their differences and come to a mutual agreement. Somalia will movie forward and things will go as planned.
I'll leave you with statement made by UN chief in his latest visit.
"“Politically, this country is coming together like never before,” he told the press. “I especially commend the agreements to form regional administrations. These bodies must be inclusive with strong representation of women and young people.”
The Secretary-General’s remarks come amid a joint trip uniting the capacities of the United Nations, World Bank, European Union, Islamic Development Bank, and African Development Bank and targeting a swathe of countries in the Horn of Africa, spanning Djibouti, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Kenya, Somalia, South Sudan, Sudan and Uganda, with an $8 billion development initiative."
"As a result, the Secretary-General reiterated the United Nations and the international community’s two-pronged commitment to helping Somalia address its “immense” political, governance, security and development challenges and consolidating the progress made by the country so far."
“Many of the indicators are finally pointing in the right direction,” Mr. Ban declared. “Somalia needs continuity and stability at this critical time.”