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3. Methodology
interest of the nation and to quickly resolve outstanding issues of implementation through dialogue and compromise, so that a credible electoral process can proceed as soon as possible. 19
The mandates of the Somali Federal Parliament and of the Government come to an end in August and September 2016, respectively. These institutions declared jointly at the end of July, conditions in Somali are not yet conducive to the conduct of one-person one-vote elections in 2016.. 14 the federal government and parliament ends September and February 201 national consolation council lead by the prime minister will lead the elections and the execution role for the power transition. 20
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Somalia electoral conflict changed into gun fire after members of the national army open fire to highly organised electoral delay protest in the street of Mogadishu. At nigh the army launched attach to the base of former presidents and MPs and Ministries based in front of the village Somalia area 21
EISA has been working civic education awareness and training for Somalia Civil society Organizations. The youth, women, political parts and the PWDs the last years. The trainings, panel discussions and public speaking for election contributed much on the ground in the country. 22
3. METHODOLOGY
Interactive sessions for the election work procedures brief in Somalia were used to conduct the research. Women and children, youth, humanitarian, human rights, marginalized community, and PWDs (persons with disabilities) are among the members of the civil society organizations clusters.
] inclusive election all report professional research report structure and methodology that will lead to future electoral referrals, guides, and corrections. Where the contributions of the participants constitute resource-rich raw materials for future action usage The data was gathered through participant group discussions, presentations, and recommendations, with professional experienced experts' facilitators and consultants leading the two-day sessions' work achievement and results of qualified election observers.
Participants
A total of 40 people from civil society clusters attended the two-day training and consultation: youth, disability, women and children, marginalized community, humanitarian and human rights. Each day, 20 participants (11 males and 9 females) addressed the identical themes. The total gender participants (22 men and 18 females) were close to gender equality over the two-day job planning process.
The talks for the inclusive for all election in Somalia were led by participants with a specific theme and pointed to each individual cluster member discussion and the cross-section conversations. The teams' active participation aided the harvesting of supportive information that was analysed in the discussions and situation analysis, resulting in valuable conclusions, findings, and recommendations to the Somalia election stakeholders, including civil society, political parties, the international community, the federal state, and the federal government.