The National Electoral Commission has begun dispatching election materials to South West State, days before the region’s landmark one-person-one-vote polls scheduled for 15 May 2026. The operation, confirmed on Monday, aims to equip all polling stations across the state’s six districts ahead of the first direct local elections in decades.
This election marks a critical test for Somalia’s long-stalled transition from clan-based power-sharing to universal suffrage. South West State is the second federal member state to attempt the model after Puntland’s 2025 local elections. Success here could accelerate the national push for direct voting, while failure would hand ammunition to critics of the federal government’s electoral roadmap.
Commission officials said ballot boxes, voting screens, indelible ink, and result sheets are being transported under heavy security. Armoured convoys escorted by regional police left the state capital, Baidoa, early Tuesday.
“Today, we have sent off the materials intended for the 13 districts where the integrated elections in South West State will be held,” the Chairman said.
Logistical challenges remain in remote areas where al-Shabaab controls key roads. The Commission has not confirmed how many polling units are at risk.
Observers from the African Union and the UN Assistance Mission in Somalia are already on the ground. They will watch for fraud, security breaches, and voter turnout, particularly among women and internally displaced persons.
More than 420,000 registered voters are expected to cast ballots if the process holds. Final results are due within 48 hours of polling day.