Former Aljazeera journalist elected to join Kenya's 13th Parliament
Veteran journalist
Mohamed Adow has clinched the Wajir South parliamentary seat after trouncing
six opponents in the just concluded August 9 General Election.
Adow, who ran on an Orange Democratic Movement
(ODM) party ticket, garnered 13,990 votes dethroning the incumbent MP Mohamud Sheikh Mohammed, who
received 4,293 votes.
The new MP-elect
was followed closely by Mohamud Muhumed Sirat, with 7,545 votes.
Others in the race
were Abdullahi Yussuf Noor (7,317), Mohamed Kahiye Bullet
(1,274), Khalif Abdi Ali (654) and Dekow Noor Ali (53 votes).
Being his
first-time stab at the parliamentary seat, Adow has beaten all odds to ascend to the legislative position with promises of transforming the lives of
his people in the conflict-prone Northern Kenya region.
“This election has
been framed. It’s about ideas and long-lasting policies that will replenish the
full potential of Wajir South
in all its spheres. We are united on a common goal – a better and developed
Wajir south,” he wrote on a social media platform.
He also pledged to
base his political leadership on effective development, improving education and
uplifting voters’ living standards.
Having started his
media career as a Garissa correspondent for the Nation in 1996, Adow rose over the ranks to become a world Aljazeera
correspondent in Africa, the Middle East and Europe by 2017.
He has also worked for the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) as a correspondent in Nairobi and Ethiopia prior
to his appointment in the Qatar-based Al Jazeera.
During most of the
appointments, he worked on ethnic- discrimination stories in Northern Kenya
against Somalis and also covered the infamous Al Shabaab conflict between Kenya
and Somalia.
In early January
2014, Adow was expelled from South Sudan for reporting on the anti-government
protesters’ advance on the capital Juba.
He produced a
documentary that aired on Al Jazeera English on November 14, 2013, revealing a
history of discrimination in Kenya since independence against ethnic Somalis in
Northern Kenya.
Adow is popularly known for his Al Jazeera documentary dubbed “Not Yet Kenyan” and his expulsion from South Sudan for reporting on the anti-government protesters’ advance on the capital Juba.
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