2026 election: Djibouti president leaves door open to sixth term

President of Djibouti Ismail Omar Guelleh. (AFP)
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Updated 23 May 2025
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2026 election: Djibouti president leaves door open to sixth term

ADDIS ABABA: Djiboutian President Ismail Omar Guelleh, in power since 1999, did not rule out running for a sixth term in next year’s election despite a constitutional ban on doing so, in an interview published on Friday.
Asked about a potential candidacy in April 2026 in the interview with The Africa Report, the 77-year-old said: “I won’t answer that.”
“What I can say is that I love my country too much to lead it into a reckless venture or sow division,” he added.
Running in the 2026 race would require changing the constitution, which prohibits candidates older than 75.
Guelleh won 97 percent of the vote in the 2021 election, and his UMP party currently holds a majority in parliament.

BACKGROUND

Ismail Omar Guelleh won 97 percent of the vote in the 2021 election, and his UMP party currently holds a majority in parliament.

Guelleh, known as “IOG,” succeeded Hassan Gouled Aptidon — who led Djibouti to independence from France in 1977 — after serving as his chief of staff for 22 years.
Djibouti is a stable state in a troubled region that has become a key strategic base for major powers, with the US, France, and China all maintaining a military presence there.
The Horn of Africa country, bordering Ethiopia, Somalia, and Eritrea, is one of the least populated on the continent, with around one million inhabitants.


Pope Leo appeals for end to ‘spiral of violence’ after Iran strikes

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Pope Leo appeals for end to ‘spiral of violence’ after Iran strikes

  • ‘Stability and peace are not built through ‌mutual threats or through weapons … but only through ⁠reasonable, ⁠genuine, and responsible dialogue’
VATICAN CITY: Pope Leo said on Sunday that he is following events after US-Israeli strikes against Iran with “deep concern” and made an impassioned appeal to ‌stop what ‌he called ‌a “spiral ⁠of violence.”
“I address ⁠a heartfelt appeal to the parties involved to assume the moral responsibility to ⁠stop the spiral ‌of ‌violence before it becomes ‌an irreparable abyss,” ‌said the pope.
“Stability and peace are not built through ‌mutual threats or through weapons ... but only through ⁠reasonable, ⁠genuine, and responsible dialogue,” the pope said during his weekly address to pilgrims in St. Peter’s Square after a Sunday prayer.