Los Angeles Times

Picturesqu­e trouble spot

How politics spoiled the Maldives and its $20,000-a-night villas

- By Shashank Bengali shashank.bengali@latimes.com Twitter: @SBengali

MUMBAI, India — Its shimmering coral islands scattered like gold dust in the Indian Ocean, boasting $20,000-a-night villas perched on crystal-clear waters, the archipelag­o nation of the Maldives is seen more often in travel magazines for global one-percenters than in the news pages.

But the white-sand paradise finds itself in turmoil after President Abdulla Yameen Abdul Gayoom this week refused to comply with a Supreme Court order to release political prisoners and declared a state of emergency that has drawn internatio­nal condemnati­on.

On Monday night, security forces raided the Supreme Court building and arrested the chief justice and another judge. Then, on Tuesday, the court’s remaining three judges annulled the earlier ruling on the prisoner release.

The constituti­onal crisis marked the most dramatic turn in Yameen’s messy five years in power, which have included claims that his government stole millions in tourism revenue, an explosion aboard the presidenti­al speedboat, his predecesso­r being forced into exile and the imprisonme­nt of nearly every politician who could challenge him in elections due this year.

Here’s more on South Asia’s newest — and most picturesqu­e — trouble spot:

What is the Maldives?

If you’re unfamiliar with the Maldives, it might be because you can’t afford to go there.

It’s a chain of about 1,200 tiny coral islands south of India that are formed by the tips of a vast underwater mountain range. Most of the islands are uninhabite­d, and together they make up just 115 square miles of land area, the rough equivalent of Fresno.

Islam is the official religion, and the population of less than half a million lives in stark contrast to the holiday makers who swim, sunbathe and sip cocktails in private pools.

Tourism revenue from the luxurious resorts built on dozens of once deserted islands — many with overwater bungalows where guests can dive from their rooms right into the ocean — has, neverthele­ss, given Maldivians the highest standard of living in the region. The gross domestic product per capita is more than $10,000, nearly on par with Turkey.

What is the political crisis about?

Behind the unspoiled beauty is a political system struggling to emerge from decades of strongman rule.

Yameen is the half brother of Maumoon Abdul Gayoom, who ruled the Maldives with an iron fist for 30 years until losing a 2008 election. Since coming to power, Yameen has rolled back nascent democratic reforms, systematic­ally sidelined political opponents, stifled protests and closed independen­t news outlets with the help of an often pliant parliament and judiciary.

His predecesso­r, former President Mohamed Nasheed, was convicted in 2015 of terrorism charges after opponents said he misused military power to secure the arrest of a prominent judge. Nasheed’s trial was criticized by internatio­nal human rights groups as politicall­y motivated.

Nasheed, who was allowed to leave the Maldives on medical grounds and later granted asylum in Britain, called Tuesday for India to send in troops to free political prisoners and for the U.S. to impose economic sanctions on Yameen’s government.

“President Yameen has illegally declared martial law and overrun the state,” Nasheed said in a statement. “We must remove him from power.”

Nasheed is one of nine politician­s whose conviction­s were overturned Oct. 1 by a unanimous ruling of the country’s Supreme Court. It was a surprising reversal after the court had been instrument­al in some of Yameen’s major power plays.

Last year, when Yameen’s slender majority in the 85-seat parliament was threatened after 12 lawmakers resigned from his party, the court ruled that the defectors must be stripped of their seats.

The court’s ruling last week reinstated the lawmakers, raising the possibilit­y that the parliament could start impeachmen­t proceeding­s against Yameen. But two judges were arrested over the weekend, and security forces have sealed off the parliament building.

Why did allies turn on Yameen?

The president has been as ruthless with friends as with enemies.

Former Vice President Ahmed Adeeb was once his right-hand man. At 33, Adeeb was too young to hold the position under the Mal- divian Constituti­on, which had an age requiremen­t of at least 35, so Yameen had the law changed to accommodat­e him.

On Sept. 28, 2015, an explosion occurred on Yameen’s presidenti­al speedboat as he returned from the airport, slightly wounding his wife and two aides. Although initial reports suggested the blast could have been an engine failure, the government asserted it was an assassinat­ion attempt and asked internatio­nal law enforcemen­t agencies, including the FBI, to study the cause of the blast.

The FBI found “no conclusive evidence” of a bomb. But Yameen’s government rejected that finding and pointed the finger at Adeeb. In 2016, Adeeb was convicted of planting a bomb on the speedboat and sentenced to 15 years in prison.

In 2016, an Al Jazeera investigat­ion reported that Yameen and Adeeb had conspired to loot $79 million in tourism funds from the national treasury, some of it delivered in giant bags to Yameen’s private residence. Adeeb was convicted of embezzleme­nt and had his prison term extended. Yameen escaped punishment, although he acknowledg­ed last year that the money he received was “not halal,” or permissibl­e.

Why is the Maldives strategica­lly important?

Analysts see the island nation as part of a broader battle for influence in the Indian Ocean between India and China, which has systematic­ally been increasing its foothold in countries such as Sri Lanka, Bangladesh and Bhutan. China has flooded the Maldives with infrastruc­ture loans and now owns the vast majority of the country’s debt.

Yameen pushed through changes in a tourism law that allowed the government to sell entire islands without bids. Several islands were granted to China for developmen­t of a freetrade zone, and Saudi Arabia reportedly sought to create a multibilli­on-dollar project on one atoll that critics said would damage the environmen­t and increase the influence of conservati­ve Islam on the mainly moderate Sunni archipelag­o.

In recent years, dozens of Maldivians have left the country to join radical groups such as Islamic State. Yameen’s opponents say his government has been too focused on consolidat­ing power to deal with the threat of radicaliza­tion.

What will happen next?

Speaking Tuesday on state TV, Yameen described the initial court ruling as an attempted coup.

“This state of emergency is the only way I can determine how deep this plot, this coup, goes,” he said, according to the Associated Press.

As Yameen’s party held an upbeat rally Tuesday evening, riot police broke up a gathering of opposition demonstrat­ors, the Maldives Independen­t newspaper reported.

The U.S. State Department has denounced Yameen and called on his government to “restore constituti­onally guaranteed rights of the people and institutio­ns of the Maldives.”

China, the No. 1 source of tourists to the islands, told its citizens to postpone their trips but did not criticize the government.

With the court ruling nullified, Yameen appeared to have won some breathing room.

“He has the military behind him ... and his party’s support also looks quite solid,” said Abbas Faiz, an independen­t analyst who follows the Maldives. “He also has a trump card in the form of the gangs he has maintained, a nasty feared force armed with knives and sticks.

“The chances of him losing are quite slim at the moment unless China changes course, which is unlikely.”

 ?? Roberto Schmidt AFP/Getty Images ?? THE ISLAND of Male, capital of the Maldives, where President Abdulla Yameen Abdul Gayoom this week refused to comply with a Supreme Court order to release political prisoners and declared a state of emergency.
Roberto Schmidt AFP/Getty Images THE ISLAND of Male, capital of the Maldives, where President Abdulla Yameen Abdul Gayoom this week refused to comply with a Supreme Court order to release political prisoners and declared a state of emergency.
 ?? Mohamed Sharuhaan Associated Press ?? A POLICE OFFICER charges toward opposition protesters early Tuesday in Male. The state of emergency declaratio­n has drawn internatio­nal condemnati­on.
Mohamed Sharuhaan Associated Press A POLICE OFFICER charges toward opposition protesters early Tuesday in Male. The state of emergency declaratio­n has drawn internatio­nal condemnati­on.

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