Three years have passed since the current government headed by President Abdullah Farmajo, but what disturbed this government was the bloody explosion in 2017, in addition to the differences between the central government and the federal states resulting from constitutional problems, in addition to the file on foreign relations and the distribution of wealth.

The Mujahideen Youth Movement still adopts many explosions and assassinations across the country, which destabilizes stability and makes development difficult. The Somali police chief, General Abdul Hassan Muhammad, confirmed the existence of a conspiracy against the country's security, calling on citizens to cooperate with the police.

The Somali police have taken a policy of closing the entrances to the capital, Mogadishu, in addition to closing main streets and imposing checkpoints to prevent any violence after the country witnessed a series of successive explosions during the years 2017 and 2018, and these security measures have affected the lives of citizens.

With the relatively stable conditions in the country, many expatriates returned to open restaurants and hotels frequented by citizens and officials, but they were also a new target for many explosions that led to the destruction of many of them.

But the reopening of the capital's airport and the reception of aircraft from international companies had an impact on the country, and many countries reopened their embassies in Mogadishu after having worked for decades from Kenya, and Somalia is awaiting the elections scheduled to be held in February of next year.

A member of the security committee in the Somali parliament, Taher Jisoo, believes that the bombings in the country were aimed at exterminating the Somalis, stressing that targeting the capital is targeting 3 million Somalis, and the aim is to discredit the country to strike its stability.

The taxi driver, Abd al-Qadir Issa, spoke of the closure of streets in Mogadishu due to the deteriorating security situation, which exacerbated their suffering in moving between the regions of the capital, and that entry and exit to the heart of the capital required standing in a queue that lasted 5 or 6 hours, but circumstances forced him to leave His car and work on a tuk-tuk.

As for the director of "Hamar Boarding" school, Abd al-Rahman Shaer, he talked about the incident of the killing of a student in the school after an exchange of fire at a checkpoint, noting that due to the multiplicity of security checkpoints and the difficulty of movement, many schools closed their doors after access to them was blocked.

The driver of the "boarding school Hamar" school, Ibrahim Moallem, narrates the difficulties he faces as a bus driver, as he stressed that getting to the school has become very difficult and needs a lot of effort, and that in light of the great security proliferation in the streets and their closure, he sees himself primarily responsible for the safety and security of students even Deliver them.

The owner of a hotel in Mogadishu, Jerry Hajj Hassan, spoke to the "rest of the story" about his emigration and his family to Italy after the outbreak of the war, and returned to Somalia after the war stopped and rebuilt his hotel in the hope that the country would improve, but his hotel was subjected to 3 bombings, 2 of which survived. VIP, after which he decided to close the hotel.

The owner of a restaurant in Mogadishu, Abd al-Razzaq and Rasmi, confirmed that the explosion that occurred in his restaurant was the most violent and worst explosion in the history of Somalia, in which about 700 people were killed, but the Somali person by nature rises again.