Audio By Carbonatix
Somalia is to introduce Swahili, the lingua franca of East Africa, to its national curriculum, the president has announced.
English is used as the language of instruction for most subjects nationwide at secondary schools, with Arabic the only other compulsory second language taught at the moment.
But President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud said Swahili should also be taught at schools and universities, making the declaration at a summit of the East African Community (EAC) that is taking place in the capital, Mogadishu.
Somalia officially joined the eight-nation regional trading bloc last year with the intention of boosting economic growth following three decades of war.
With more than 200 million speakers, Swahili is one of the world's 10 most widely spoken languages.
"The country's universities, especially the Somali National University, should focus more on developing the Swahili language, which is the language of East Africa," President Mohamud said.
"Adopting Swahili is important for our integration into the region," he said.
Education Minister Farah Sheikh Abdulkadir added that the government had great ambitions for the adoption of Swahili nationwide.
"We want to see Swahili become a language of communication, trade and learning - even replacing English during our next conference," he said at the EAC gathering.
Swahili dialects are already spoken along Somalia's southern coast and the language has been used more widely around the country in recent years - one of the consequences of the civil war that erupted in 1991 and brought decades of instability and more recently jihadist violence.
Hundreds of thousands of people have sought refuge over the border in Kenya, many going on to learn how to speak Swahili - especially those who have gone through the Kenyan education system.
As the situation in Somalia has somewhat stabilised in recent years, some of these fluent Swahili speakers have returned or have links back home, while the presence of African Union troops has also seen the language grow.
These soldiers, many from East African nations, have been deployed since 2007 with Swahili often their common language.
Until 2016, Arabic was the language of instruction in Somalia at junior schools and English at secondary and tertiary levels.
Now the primary school national curriculum is taught in Somali with the curriculum remaining in English for higher education - and Arabic used at madrassas, or Islamic schools.
Latest Stories
-
Afari Hospital: Only $500,000 in arrears needed for completion; demand for $85m criminal—Minority
2 minutes -
Mahama gov’t paying itself while Akufo-Addo staff remain unpaid – Kow Essuman
6 minutes -
Kow Essuman accuses Kwakye Ofosu of misleading public on Presidential salaries
9 minutes -
BoG urges banks to support agriculture and productive sectors
10 minutes -
2026 World Cup: Chief Imam urges national prayers for Black Stars ahead of Panama opener
11 minutes -
Ofori-Atta yet to be notified of any criminal charges in Ghana – Frank Davies
13 minutes -
Chief Imam calls for national prayers and support for Black Stars at the FIFA World Cup 2026
15 minutes -
Ashanti Regional Minister inspects flood hotspots at KNUST, vows crackdown on encroachment
16 minutes -
GPRTU eyes cashless transport system to curb armed robbery attacks on drivers
23 minutes -
Green Card decision does not invalidate charges against Ofori-Atta — OSP
32 minutes -
Minority blames NDC for delays in Afari Military Hospital project
38 minutes -
Gov’t processing UTAG book and research allowance payments, no strike expected – Haruna Iddrisu
40 minutes -
‘It’s up to Ghanaian authorities to explore options’ – Ofori-Atta’s lawyer says after US residency
42 minutes -
Banking sector strong but credit risks remain – BoG Governor warns
42 minutes -
BoG warns bank staff against collusion in collateral fraud
50 minutes