Somalia FROM INDEPENDENCE TO REVOLUTION
Old fort, used as museum, Mogadishu
Courtesy R.W.S. Hudson
During the nine-year period of parliamentary democracy that
followed Somali independence, freedom of expression was widely
regarded as being derived from the traditional right of every man
to be heard. The national ideal professed by Somalis was one of
political and legal equality in which historical Somali values
and acquired Western practices appeared to coincide. Politics was
viewed as a realm not limited to one profession, clan, or class,
but open to all male members of society. The role of women,
however, was more limited. Women had voted in Italian Somaliland
since the municipal elections in 1958. In May 1963, by an
assembly margin of 52 to 42, suffrage was extended to women in
former British Somaliland as well. Politics was at once the
Somalis' most practiced art and favorite sport. The most desired
possession of most nomads was a radio, which was used to keep
informed on political news. The level of political participation
often surpassed that in many Western democracies.
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