Hindustan Times (Ranchi)

Maldives: Pull-out of India’s military personnel complete

- Agence France-Presse letters@hindustant­imes.com

THE INDIAN PERSONNEL WERE OPERATING THREE RECONNAISS­ANCE AIRCRAFT THAT NEW DELHI HAD GIFTED THE MALDIVES TO PATROL ITS VAST MARITIME BOUNDARY

India pulled out its last remaining soldiers stationed in the Maldives on Friday, meeting a deadline for their withdrawal that had strained ties between the two neighbours.

Pro-China President Mohamed Muizzu won office last year while campaignin­g on a promise to downgrade ties with India, and has since reoriented the strategica­lly placed archipelag­o nation towards Beijing.

After coming to power, he demanded the withdrawal of Indian soldiers who had been stationed in the upscale beach holiday destinatio­n to assist with maritime patrols.

The third and final batch of 27 Indian troops left the archipelag­o on Friday, the official said, declining to be named as they were not authorised to speak to media.

Another 51 soldiers had left the atoll nation by Tuesday, according to Indian and Maldivian officials.

The foreign ministry official added that there was no public ceremony held to mark the end of the Indian military deployment.

The Indian troops were operating three reconnaiss­ance aircraft that New Delhi had gifted the Maldives to patrol its vast maritime boundary.

Indian foreign ministry spokesman Randhir Jaiswal said on Thursday that the departing soldiers had been replaced by civilian “technical personnel”.

The dispute over the garrison, and the Maldives’ overtures to Beijing, have been viewed with consternat­ion in New Delhi.

But both South Asian nations struck a conciliato­ry note in a meeting between their foreign ministers in the Indian capital a day before the withdrawal deadline.

Maldivian envoy Moosa Zameer said his trip to Delhi marked a “new initiative of collaborat­ion, symbolisin­g enduring friendship and shared goals”.

His Indian counterpar­t S. Jaishankar said both countries had a common interest in reaching “an understand­ing on how best we take our relationsh­ip forward.”

The Maldives is a small nation of 1,192 tiny coral islets scattered 800 kilometres across the equator, but it strategica­lly straddles key east-west internatio­nal shipping routes.

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