The Borneo Post

Solih sworn in as Maldives president, replacing pro-China leader

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COLOMBO: Ibrahim Mohamed Solih was inaugurate­d yesterday as the new president of the Maldives after the opposition united to dislodge pro-China strongman leader Abdulla Yameen in September elections.

Solih, 54, emerged as common opposition candidate as all key dissidents were either jailed or forced into exile by Yameen who took power following a controvers­ial run-off in 2013.

At a special session of parliament held at the National Football Stadium in the capital Male, Solih was sworn in with India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi among those in attendance.

The Maldives foreign ministry said China’s culture minister Luo Shugang was also an invitee.

Modi’s presence was a reflection of the relief felt in India, which has long held sway in the archipelag­o, and in the West that Yameen was voted out.

The United States and the European Union had threatened sanctions if the vote had not been free and fair.

Both neighbouri­ng India and Western nations watched with concern as Yameen moved closer to Beijing which loaned the strategica­lly placed archipelag­o millions of dollars for infrastruc­ture.

“I am confident that my visit will herald a new era of even closer exchanges and cooperatio­n between our two countries,” Modi said on Facebook, especially in “infrastruc­ture, health care, connectivi­ty and human resource developmen­t.”

Solih’s Maldivian Democratic Party (MDP) has pledged to end what it called ‘China’s colonialis­m’ and to resist a ‘land grab’ in the country which straddles key EastWest shipping routes.

MDP leader and former president Mohamed Nasheed has vowed his party would reduce reliance on China and renegotiat­e millions of dollars in loans taken from Beijing.

More than 80 per cent the Maldives foreign debt is owed to China, he said.

China has also loaned other countries around the Indian Ocean and beyond large amounts of money for infrastruc­ture projects as part of Beijing’s Belt and Road Initiative, alarming the West.

Sri Lanka last year granted a 99-year lease on the Hambantota deep-sea port to Beijing, after it was unable to repay Chinese loans for the US$1.4-billion project.

Mahinda Rajapakse, Sri Lanka’s prime minister when Colombo took out the loans, is looking to return to power in the severe current political crisis gripping the island nation.

During a recent visit to Colombo in the middle of his election campaign, Solih told reporters that he wanted to repair ties with immediate neighbours Sri Lanka and India.

Yameen awarded major infrastruc­ture projects to China while taking away a major airport developmen­t from India. — AFP

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