Google – AFP, Amal Jayasinghe (AFP), 20 October 2013
![]() |
Supporters
of Mohamed Nasheed stage a protest barbecue in a street in Male
on October 19,
2013 (AFP)
|
Colombo —
The Maldives embraced multi-party democracy in 2008 hoping to emerge a modern
nation. Five years on, there are fears the honeymoon islands are becoming a
"banana republic" ready to implode.
The
political crisis came to a head Saturday when police blocked elections designed
to restore stability after the first democratically elected leader, Mohamed
Nasheed, was toppled 20 months ago.
But
observers say there should no surprise at the turmoil as key institutions are
still run by followers of the country's long-time dictator who never accepted
Nasheed's 2008 victory.
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A fisherman unloads fish at a market in
Male on October 20, 2013 (AFP, Ishara
S.Kodikara)
|
"After
a long tradition of one-party rule, the Maldives is now fast becoming a banana
republic," said regional defence analyst Iqbal Athas.
"My
real fear is that all this political unrest can turn into violent chaos,"
added Athas, associate editor of the Colombo-based Sunday Times.
Athas said
instability could have consequences for regional security because of the huge
Indian Ocean trade.
The 1,192
tiny coral islands of the Maldives may be home to only 350,000 mainly Sunni
Muslims.
But
scattered some 850 kilometres (530 miles) across the equator, they are an
important location along east-west sea trade.
Pro-Western
Nasheed, a former Amnesty International prisoner of conscience, was forced to
resign following a mutiny by police who are still thought to be loyal to former
autocrat Maumoon Abdul Gayoom, 75.
It was the
same police force that prevented the independent Elections Commission from
going ahead with Saturday's presidential poll, which Nasheed, 46, was widely
expected to win.
Given that
Nasheed was widely forecast to win an outright majority in Saturday's vote, its
scuttling came as no surprise with the Supreme Court having also played its
role.
Nasheed's
main challenger, Gayoom's half-brother Abdullah Yameen, was a distant second to
Nasheed in a the first round of voting held on September 7.
But the result
was annulled by the Supreme Court last month following allegations of
irregularities in voter lists, although foreign monitors gave the polls a clean
chit.
By
stipulating that all candidates had to approve the voter lists, the court
effectively gave Nasheed's challengers carte blanche to block a vote they were
sure to lose.
![]() |
A vendor
carries a bunch of 'king Coconuts'
along a street in Male on October 20,
2013
(AFP, Ishara S.Kodikara)
|
"The
problem with the Maldives is they adopted Western-style democracy without
proper institutions to support the transition," a Western diplomat
accredited to the Maldives said.
Gayoom
ruled the Maldives with an iron fist for 30 years until he lost the first
multi-party election in 2008 to Nasheed. Until then, it was an offence in the
Maldives to put oneself forward as a presidential hopeful.
Despite the
outward veneer of democracy, observers say Gayoom's supporters still control
key levers of power such as the judiciary.
An
exasperated Nasheed ordered the military to arrest a criminal court judge on
charges of a politically motivated decision in 2011.
The move
backfired leading to a police mutiny that eventually forced him to resign and
later say he was ousted in a coup.
Nasheed's
then deputy, Mohamed Waheed took over the leadership and was seen by Western
and Asian diplomats as Gayoom's puppet.
"Gayoom
has his tentacles everywhere in the administration so he can still call the
shots from behind the scenes," said another Colombo-based diplomat.
"He
built a formidable machinery in the three decades he was in office."
![]() |
Supporters
Mohamed Nasheed stage a
protest in Male on October 19, 2013 (AFP,
Ishara
S.Kodikara)
|
The
outgoing Waheed's regime is trying Nasheed for ordering the incarceration of a
judge accused of corruption. He was allowed to run for president only after
intense international pressure to ensure an "inclusive election".
If
convicted, Nasheed faces up to three years in jail or banishment to a remote
island.
Nasheed has
long feared Gayoom loyalists would do whatever they could to prevent him
returning to power.
"They
do not want me to be president," Nasheed told AFP in an interview last
year.
"You
can bring down a dictator in a day, but it can take years to stamp out the
remnants of his dictatorship."
He admitted
failure to reform the judiciary in the first year of his office, but blamed his
woes on a hostile parliament.
Despite the
turmoil, the country has so far this year attracted nearly one million tourists
to its pristine beaches and turquoise seas popular with upmarket honeymooners.
With
holidaymakers usually rushed straight from the airport to exclusive resorts,
few are even aware of the simmering discord.
Related Articles:
Maldives: new presidential election date set
Police Force Postponement of Maldives Vote
Culture War as the Maldives Opens Up to Backpackers




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