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| Solih took office last month after winning a landslide election victory (AFP) |
The Maldives has applied to rejoin the Commonwealth, reversing a policy of isolation under autocratic leader Abdulla Yameen who suffered a shock defeat in September.
His
successor, Ibrahim Mohamed Solih, wrote to the 53-member bloc on Friday seeking
readmission two years after Yameen pulled the atoll nation out of it, the
president's office said Sunday.
Yameen
withdrew the Maldives, an archipelago of 340,000 Sunni Muslims, from the
Commonwealth after it mounted pressure on him to protect human rights and
ensure the rule of law amid a ferocious crackdown on dissent.
Solih's
office said the new president's administration believed in the values of the
bloc, which consists mainly of former territories and colonies of the British
empire.
"The
Maldives' interest in re-joining the Commonwealth stems from a deep conviction
that the values and principles enshrined in the Commonwealth Charter are more
vital than ever," the president's office said in a statement.
The
54-year-old took office last month after winning a landslide election victory
despite Yameen waging a crackdown on his political rivals and jailing most of
the opposition.
The former
British protectorate faced persistent international pressure during Yameen's
iron-fisted tenure. The strongman accused the London-based Commonwealth
Secretariat of interfering in the nation's affairs.
During
Yameen's reign, the United States had repeatedly warned democracy was under
serious threat in the strategically-located archipelago sitting on key
international shipping lanes.
Since
Solih's election, political prisoners have been freed and opposition figures in
exile have returned home.
Solih has
warned of a "dire" economic crisis in the Maldives and asked regional
power India for help. Yameen had drifted closer to China and the Maldives saw
its foreign debt balloon under his leadership.

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