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| Former president Mohamed Nasheed is set to return to power after his MDP party headed for a two-thirds majority (AFP Photo/Ahmed SHURAU) |
The exiled former leader of the Maldives has led his party to a landslide victory only five months after returning to the country, preliminary results showed Sunday.
Ex-president
Mohamed Nasheed, 51, was set for a dramatic return to the top of the national
parliament, with his Maldivian Democratic Party headed for a two-thirds
majority in the 87-member assembly.
Saturday's
poll was the first test of public opinion since autocratic former president and
Nasheed's arch-rival Abdulla Yameen was forced to stand down after his
five-year term, facing charges of money laundering and embezzlement.
Nasheed
returned to the country after his former deputy President Ibrahim Mohamed Solih
won an unexpected victory in September presidential elections for the MDP.
Yameen had barred Nasheed from contesting.
Preliminary
results from Saturday's election showed the MDP winning 50 out of the 87 seats,
while private media reports projected the party eventually getting up to 68
seats.
"The
Maldives is about to welcome a new dawn, a golden yellow dawn,” Nasheed told
his supporters in Male on Saturday. Yellow is the colour of his party.
Election
officials estimated the final turnout to be between 70 and 80 percent, down
from the 89 percent recorded at the September presidential election which
unexpectedly toppled Yameen.
Nasheed,
now set to take over the leadership of the legislature, has promised to turn
the country into a parliamentary democracy by scrapping the executive
presidential system adopted under political reforms in 2008.
President
Solih said in a statement that the MDP had "secured a huge majority in
Majlis (parliament)".
"While
we celebrate, we must also not forget the immense challenges that lie ahead of
us," he said.
Solih
campaigned for the MDP asking voters to return a parliament that could work
with him to deliver on his election promises in September to investigate corruption
under Yameen.
While
Yameen was not a candidate, his Progressive Party of Maldives was seen as the
main challenger to the MDP -- but ended up with a poor showing, and is
projected to get only four seats.
Nasheed was
jailed for 13 years on a controversial terrorism charge when Yameen was in
power. However, the conviction was overturned last year after the presidency
changed.
Election
commissioner Ahmed Shareef told reporters there had been no complaints of
irregularities in the runup to the vote, during balloting or at the count.
The
Maldives was on the verge of being slapped with Western-led sanctions before
Solih won the presidential election on a pledge to end corruption in the
country best known for its luxury tourism.

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