Originally Published 2017-08-28 09:22:58 Published on Aug 28, 2017
Bizarre developments in the Maldives
Political situation in the island nation of Maldives has been swinging from the tragic to the farcical in the last two months as President Yameen struggles to retain his hold on power. Having sent his nemesis – former President Nasheed to 13 years prison on an utterly bogus charge of ‘terrorism’, President Yameen thought that the remaining leaders could either be persuaded or bought off or brow-beaten into submission. It is now revealed by former Vice President Ahmed Adeeb, who was part of the ruling coterie at the time, that the charges against Nasheed were “masterminded under direct Government scheming and influence”; as if the world did not know! Though the statement is utterly unsurprising, what is new in the statement is that he has agreed to make the declaration in a court of law thereby undermining the very essence of the ‘terrorism’ charge. The other key opposition figure Qasim Ibrahim has also been imprisoned on and off in the month of April on charges that could not be substantiated before the Court. However, what Yameen could not digest was the opposition of his own family patriarch – former President Maumoon Abdul Gayoom, also the President of the ruling party, who now heads the Joint Coalition in defence of democracy in the Maldives. Gayoom’s son Faris Maumoon, MP too quit the ruling party and joined the Opposition’s bid to impeach the Speaker Abdullah Maseeh. He was arrested on 18th July and still remains in police custody. On the same day, the Elections Commission (EC) declared that four other MPs who defected from the ruling party to the Opposition in March, April and July had lost their seats, and announced by-elections. On July 20, the four MPs appealed the EC’s decision at the Supreme Court. One month after the ruling, the apex court is yet to announce a verdict. The EC’s declaration regarding the four MPs followed a controversial Supreme Court ruling of 13 July which stated that MPs who were elected on a political party ticket would lose their seat if the EC notifies parliament that the MP has either left their party, been expelled, or switched parties. However, the Supreme Court also specifically clarified that the ruling could not be applied retrospectively. Hence, the EC’s declaration that the MPs had lost their seats, in effect, contradicted the Supreme Court’s ruling. To make matters worse, they were all arrested between 24th and 28th July and remanded to Police custody for 15 days before a crucial vote of no-confidence against the Speaker, scheduled for 31st July. A week prior to the vote on 24th July, the National Defence Force locked up the gates of the Parliament and prevented entry of all MPs, which was not only in violation of the Constitution but against all parliamentary norms and was unprecedented in the history of the island nation. Several MPs who resisted and tried to force their entry were bodily removed and arrested. The military siege of the Parliament was in effect on 31st July and as MPs trooped into the legislature, they saw the speaker sitting behind a phalanx of soldiers. The session was adjourned within 2 minutes without taking up the main order of the day – the no-confidence motion against the Speaker. The President was clearly afraid that his party MPs would desert him in large numbers and impeach the speaker. Now the opposition is more than united and determined not only to impeach the Speaker but the President himself. The numbers game in the parliament, as of now, stands as follows: after the Joint Opposition submitted 45 signatures out of 85, the majority has stayed at 44 with 1 MP claiming that it was not his signature. They need only 43 signtaures to impeach the Speaker. Out of the 41 MPs left in President Yameen's camp, the current view is that not more than 28 or so MP's are on his side, with reports that a good number are ready to cross the floor at the "right time" or  when it’s "safe". Since the President’s support in parliament has collapsed, he has simply decided to lock down the parliament and not allow it to hold its sessions. Most recently, the Prosecutor General charged 13 opposition MPs with “obstruction of Police duty” for trying to enter the Parliamnet. If found guilty, they could face 1 year imprisonment  and lose their seats. All this leads to grave doubts as to whether at all President Yameen would hold the Presidential elections scheduled for September 2018 or clamp down a total emergency and put all the Oppostion MPs behind bars. President Yameen is fully ware of his dwindled support base among the people. This was evident in the local counicil elections held across the country in early May this year. The Maldivian Democratic Party won a landslide victory with 294 seats against the ruling Progressive Party of Maldives of 208 seats. The Opposition’s fears are not without a basis. They are truly concerned that the Supreme Court — and in particular, Chief Justice Abdulla Saeed — is subverting the parliamentary process by deliberately delaying its ruling in the case of the 4 MPs. To compound their fears, there are reports that the Chief of the Defence Forces, Major General Ahmed Shiyam — whose troops stormed parliament last month — is also threatening the Justices to rule in favour of President Yameen. While the situation in Maldives continues to deteriorate beyond repair, what is most depressing is the utter silence of Government of India on the goings on. The present government in Delhi that came to power on the promise of a ‘muscular foreign policy’ has time and again showed utter inability to stand up to any cause and/or to any foreign leader. If we cannot stare down a tin-pot dictator like Yameen who rules an area half the size of Janakpuri, a colony in Delhi, what kind of ‘muscular policy’ are we talking about? It’s rather sad that we not only let down our friends who are fighting for democracy and civil rights but also that we put up with a President who is providing naval bases to China and who stands approvingly besides Nawaz Sharif when he criticises India for the breakdown of the SAARC mecahnism from the soil of Male’. It’s time our policy makers woke up to the brewing storm in the Maldives, and reined in the sickly President before he commits greater horrors on his people. This commentary originally appeared in Catchnews
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Anjali Birla

Anjali Birla

Anjali Birla is an Indian Civil Services Officer(Batch 2020) working in the Ministry of Railways and has done her graduation in Political Science from Delhi ...

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