The European Union (EU) has unexpectedly replaced its Ambassador to Somalia, Francesca Di Mauro, less than a year after her appointment, in a move that has raised questions over the timing of her reassignment and its possible connection to recent diplomatic tensions between Brussels and the Somali Federal Government.
Di Mauro has been appointed as the European Union’s Director for Africa, a senior position within the EU’s diplomatic service responsible for shaping the bloc’s engagement across the African continent.
“It is an honour to be appointed Director for Africa,” Di Mauro wrote on her X account, noting that she was born and raised in Africa and describing the appointment as a significant milestone in her diplomatic career.
Her reassignment comes less than 10 months after she assumed office as the EU Ambassador to Somalia in September 2025. EU ambassadors typically serve between three and five years in their host countries, making such an early transfer highly unusual and prompting speculation over the circumstances surrounding the decision.
An Italian diplomat with extensive experience across Africa, including previous postings in Côte d’Ivoire, Di Mauro was widely known for emphasizing democratic governance, constitutional order, human rights, and institutional reform during her diplomatic career.
Diplomatic dispute with Villa Somalia
Questions surrounding her departure intensified following a diplomatic disagreement between the EU delegation and Villa Somalia earlier this year.
On May 17, 2026, Di Mauro disclosed on X that she had met Hassan Sheikh Mohamud, referring to him only by his name rather than using the title “President.” The meeting came two days after critics argued that Hassan Sheikh’s constitutional term had expired on May 15, 2026.
The omission of the presidential title was widely interpreted by political observers as a carefully worded diplomatic signal regarding the disputed constitutional status of Somalia’s leadership.


