UN urges restraint as political tensions escalate in Somalia

5 Jun 2026

UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres has expressed alarm over renewed violence in Somalia after heavy gunfire erupted in central Mogadishu.

Guterres said this in a note to correspondents delivered by Stéphane Dujarric, his spokesman, on Thursday in New York.

News reports indicate that former Prime Minister Hassan Ali Khaire accused Government forces of attacking him ahead of planned protests.

The Secretary-General stressed the urgent need for all stakeholders to return to dialogue and identify a path forward that preserves the progress Somalia has made in recent years, while ensuring protection of civilians and civilian infrastructure.

He called on all parties to exercise maximum restraint, avoid actions that could fuel further violence, and resolve political differences through peaceful dialogue.

The UN Transitional Assistance Mission in Somalia (UNTMIS) said it and international partners had repeatedly warned of the risk of repeating the political crisis seen in 2021 over disagreements surrounding the electoral roadmap.

The mission noted that those warnings had not been heeded and urged Somali leaders to prioritise the national interest and resume talks that ended on May 15.

International partners, it added, remain ready to support and facilitate renewed dialogue.