MOGADISHU (GG) — The Director of the National Intelligence and Security Agency (NISA), Mahad Mohamed Salad, officially concluded a major peace and reconciliation forum in the Balanballe district on Monday, securing a binding ceasefire agreement between local communities fractured by long-standing clan warfare.

The high-level intelligence chief presided over the closing ceremonies in the Galgaduud region, bringing together traditional elders, cultural leaders, and regional administrative officials. The specialized forum was designed to permanently dismantle deep-rooted cycles of retaliatory violence, land disputes, and localized armed skirmishes that have destabilized the strategic border district for several years.
Addressing the assembled cultural delegations on Monday afternoon, Salad emphasized that the durability of the newly signed peace accord relies entirely on the collective vigilance of local communities. The NISA director praised the traditional elders for exercising compromise during the multi-day negotiations, noting that achieving internal communal harmony remains a vital prerequisite for the federal government’s broader national stabilization and counter-insurgency agendas.
To safeguard the diplomatic breakthrough, the intelligence chief issued an explicit security directive to all regional police, federal military units, and intelligence operatives stationed across Galmudug state. Salad ordered security agencies to immediately enforce the rule of law and take decisive, zero-tolerance military or judicial action against any individual, armed militia, or political faction attempting to violate the terms of the armistice or disrupt the fragile peace.
The successful conclusion of the Balanballe reconciliation track comes as the federal government aggressively expands its governance footprint across newly liberated territories in central Somalia. Local security analysts emphasized that resolving inter-clan friction remains crucial to preventing Al-Shabaab insurgents from exploiting local grievances to recruit fighters or establish operational sanctuaries.
The security teams and local administrative councils are scheduled to establish a joint monitoring committee over the next 48 hours to oversee the implementation of the agreement, manage local resource distribution, and maintain direct communication channels with NISA headquarters in Mogadishu.
