Los Angeles Times

Maldives’ president concedes defeat in election

Authoritar­ian leader ousted after jailing his foes and racking up vast Chinese debt.

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

MUMBAI, India — The authoritar­ian leader of the Maldives, whose eager embrace of Chinese loans threatened to sink his island nation in debt, conceded defeat Monday after election officials declared a clear win for his opposition rival.

It was the latest in a string of elections in southern Asia in which voters ousted an incumbent who had allowed widespread investment by China, amid growing fears that Beijing’s lending policies were threatenin­g vulnerable economies.

President Abdulla Yameen Abdul Gayoom had kept the coral archipelag­o south of India — best known for its five-star beach resorts — in a tense limbo. He waited more than 12 hours to appear on television after unofficial returns showed he had lost the fledgling democracy’s third presidenti­al election.

Many Maldivians wondered whether Yameen — who has jailed opponents, dismissed judges and alarmed traditiona­l allies like the United States and India during five tumultuous years in office — would use force to cling to power.

But on Monday afternoon he pledged to step aside, saying: “The Maldivian people made their decision yesterday. I have accepted that result.”

With echoes of Sri Lanka in 2015 and Malaysia this year, Maldives voters had rejected a government that took on high-interest Chinese loans for showy infrastruc­ture projects, including an $800-million airport renovation and a $400-million bridge.

Opposition leaders said the debt payments would soon eat up most of Maldives’ revenue, although Yameen argued the developmen­t was necessary to boost the country’s tourismdep­endent economy.

Yameen was defeated by Ibrahim Mohamed Solih, a longtime lawmaker better known as Ibu, who emerged as the consensus opposition candidate after nearly all of Yameen’s rivals were imprisoned or sent into exile.

With nearly a 90% turnout, Solih won 58% of the quarter-million votes cast, according to preliminar­y results released by election officials, a resounding win following an election campaign that many feared would be rigged in Yameen’s favor.

Security forces harassed opposition supporters, the government denied visas to foreign journalist­s and poll monitors, and police raided Solih’s offices on the eve of the vote, claiming to be investigat­ing bribery allegation­s.

“Not everyone was expecting these results, obviously,” said Dhruva Jaishankar, a foreign policy fellow at the Brookings India think tank in New Delhi. “And questions are still lingering as to why there wasn’t more rigging.”

In claiming victory, Solih pledged to restore democratic institutio­ns and freedom of the press, including investigat­ing the death and disappeara­nce of two prominent independen­t journalist­s.

Unlike in Malaysia, where a new government is trying to renegotiat­e what it calls Beijing’s “unfair” deals, Solih has said he won’t halt any developmen­t projects and did not make China a major campaign issue. And shutting out China isn’t an option for most countries, because few other lenders have such deep pockets.

But analysts said the elections in Maldives, Malaysia and Sri Lanka — as well as Myanmar’s 2011 decision to cancel a controvers­ial Chinese-financed dam — demonstrat­e the political costs to government­s seen as being too dependent on one source of investment.

“What you’re seeing is the limitation­s of China translatin­g economic influence into political influence,” Jaishankar said. “It’s bumping up against walls in all of these places.”

Still, the Maldives result was welcome in New Delhi and in Western capitals, particular­ly after Yameen withdrew from the Commonweal­th of Nations in 2016 over sustained criticism of his government.

Some Western officials worried that the threat of Islamic extremism was rising as the Maldives, a traditiona­lly moderate majority-Muslim nation, accepted more funding from Saudi Arabia to build conservati­ve Islamic schools. Yameen also cut ties with Iran, citing security threats, a move that many saw as a bid to curry favor with the Saudis.

The U.S. Embassy in Colombo, Sri Lanka, congratula­ted Solih and said it “[looked] forward to a peaceful transition of power.” India’s Foreign Ministry hailed “the triumph of democratic forces in the Maldives.”

After he takes office, probably in November, Solih would inherit an unwieldy coalition of parties that united against Yameen, including secular and Islamist forces. Mindful of the developmen­t needs of Asia’s least populous nation, Solih has pledged to restore relations with countries Yameen spurned — but also to maintain ties with China and Saudi Arabia.

“Under this presidency, it can be hoped that the Maldives’ foreign policy won’t be restricted to China and Saudi Arabia,” said Gulbin Sultana, an analyst at the Institute for Defense Studies and Analyses in New Delhi.

 ?? Mohamed Sharuhaan Associated Press ?? “THE MALDIVIAN people made their decision yesterday. I have accepted that result,” said President Abdulla Yameen Abdul Gayoom, who will step aside.
Mohamed Sharuhaan Associated Press “THE MALDIVIAN people made their decision yesterday. I have accepted that result,” said President Abdulla Yameen Abdul Gayoom, who will step aside.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States