Oman Daily Observer

Maldives presidenti­al poll set for September

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MALE: Maldives presidenti­al election will be held in September, the country’s Election Commission chief said late on Friday, a week after the European Union and some Western nations urged the country to hold a transparen­t, credible poll.

The Maldives, home to 400,000 people and best known as a tropical paradise for tourists, has experience­d political unrest since Mohamed Nasheed (pictured), its first democratic­ally elected leader, was forced to quit amid a mutiny by police in 2012.

Nasheed, the sole candidate in last week’s primary election held by his Maldivian Democratic Party (MDP), was convicted of terrorism charges in 2015 and sentenced to 13 years in prison after a controvers­ial and widely criticised trial.

Maldives police executing a court order last week disrupted the MDP’S effort to pick Nasheed as its candidate for the election.

Elections Commission chief Ahmed Shareef said the 2018 presidenti­al poll will be held on September 23 in “the most transparen­t and open” manner.

Shareef said observers from eight countries and the EU and the Organisati­on of Islamic Cooperatio­n (OIC) would be invited.

“Unlike previous elections this election will be fully trusted by the people. We will not be withholdin­g any informatio­n other than what we have to keep secret lawfully,” he told reporters in Male.

The election will be held amid widespread criticism of civil and political rights abuses by President Abdulla Yameen’s government, with opposition leaders either in exile or behind bars, and a crackdown on media and activists.

The opposition has accused the government of locking up most of its leaders who could challenge Yameen’s bid to be re-elected for his second five-year term, a charge the government denies.

Yameen’s administra­tion has rejected a demand by a UN human rights watchdog to let Nasheed stand for the presidenti­al election.

Shareef had earlier campaigned for Yameen’s re-election prior to his appointmen­t as the Election Commission chief, and the opposition has criticised him as a biased appointee to the commission, which is meant to be independen­t.

In a tweet, Nasheed said: “MDP primaries proved EC has zero credibilit­y. EC must change to have a genuinely free, fair and inclusive election”.

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