The Borneo Post

Maldives leader blames defeat on ‘disappeari­ng ink’

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COLOMBO: Outgoing Maldives President Abdulla Yameen says disappeari­ng ink and specially treated ballot papers were to blame for his heavy election defeat last month.

The strongman leader of the honeymoon island nation had been expected to romp home in the September 23 poll, with opposition leaders jailed or exiled, and warnings that he would try to fix the vote.

But in a surprise turn of events, a little-known united opposition candidate, Ibrahim Mohamed Solih, was declared the winner, sparking celebratio­ns across the tropical holiday destinatio­n.

Yameen initially said he accepted defeat, and was ready to step down when his term ends on November 17. But last week he launched a Supreme Court challenge, seeking to annul the result.

At a hearing on Sunday which resumed Monday, Yameen’s lawyer Mohamed Saleem accused the printer of coating ballot papers with an unnamed substance to make votes marked in Yameen’s box vanish.

Saleem said a “special pen with disappeari­ng ink” had been given to people who were going to vote for his client, a reporter at the hearing said.

A lawyer for the Elections Commission, which Yameen accused of colluding with the printer to ensure his defeat, on Sunday denied any wrongdoing, including using any special ink.

A day ahead of the court hearing in the capital Male, the United States warned “appropriat­e measures” would be taken if the will of the Maldivian people was undermined.

Europe and India have also issued similar warnings in the past.

The US and its allies have been concerned by growing Chinese inf luence in the strategica­lly positioned Indian Ocean archipelag­o, especially under Yameen’s authoritar­ian rule.

Yameen’s Progressiv­e Party ( PPM) on Saturday said the vote was the “most farcical election in living memory” with the organisati­on “abysmal” and voteriggin­g “rampant”. — AFP

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 ??  ?? Maldives opposition supporters protest demanding the arrest of defeated President Abdulla Yameen as the Supreme Court of the Maldives began to hear a petition challengin­g the outcome of last’s month election in Male on Sunday. — Reuters photo
Maldives opposition supporters protest demanding the arrest of defeated President Abdulla Yameen as the Supreme Court of the Maldives began to hear a petition challengin­g the outcome of last’s month election in Male on Sunday. — Reuters photo

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