Presidential polls had been pushed back to November 30, but the electoral commission last month announced they would be in December instead.
In a statement issued after political stakeholders met yesterday, Somali leaders said they expected a new parliament to elect a speaker on December 22 before parliament members elect a president December 28.
The delays reflect the challenges of holding elections in this Horn of Africa nation riven by clan rivalries and threatened by Islamic extremists, al-Shabab, opposed to Western-style democracy.
Officials have said voting for members of the upper house is almost complete, while that for the lower house is just past the halfway mark.
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Somalia has been trying to rebuild after recently establishing its first functioning central government since 1991, when warlords overthrew a longtime dictator and plunged the impoverished nation into chaos.
The election delays have worried some in the international community, which has expressed interest in having the votes carried out this year.
But some clans and candidates have continued to file complaints over the process. Allegations of corruption and manipulation abound, leading to warnings by the electoral commission that some elected seats may be nullified because of allegations that candidates paid bribes to sway voters.
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