Perfect_Order wrote:eyes-only wrote:Well he was given 30 days, he has many days left to do as he wishes.
To be honest, none of them are in a position to be sticking out fingers at each other. Farmajo is being used as a pawn against the TFG and it's checkmate either way. As for Farmaajo, he should learn from Sh. Shariif and not let history repeat itself. But knowing he's a politician, he'll probably not learn from history.
Explain how Farmaajo is being used against the tfg? Who is using him, why are they using him. And learn what from shariif?
Well, if the parliament signs the agreement...the parliament dies with him...they're literally signing away their powers. If they don't, they're going against the wishes of the master that feeds them and they will be seen as not co-operating and will probably not be getting any more funds and will hence collapse or continue their endless infighting. Sh. Shariif through what I can only call an error of judgement has made himself into an even bigger lame duck by agreeing to the Kampala agreement and he's become very unpopular (he's dead either way).... They're all done for.
Farmajo should learn from Shariif and let the whole thing collapse on itself just like Sh. Shariif should have done when he was popular. People can put you high one minute but it won't last and sticking to his position for another year with that sort of parliament ain't going to get him anywhere. Him and Shariif are not enemies, at the end of the day he was appointed by him.
I'm just hoping that there's a smarter plan in place and that they are somehow just using this crap to ensure the parliament truly accepts Farmajo and starts working with him, to sort of help them open their eyes. It just seems too silly to expect the parliament to agree to those points and for Sh. Shariif to believe in them....even if they're all headless chicken.