The Hindu (Kolkata)

First major political test for Muizzu as Maldives votes in parliament polls

- Meera Srinivasan AFP

Less than a year after his election as President of the Maldives, incumbent Mohamed Muizzu will face his rst major political test in Sunday’s legislativ­e elections that will determine the extent of his control over parliament or People’s Majlis.

In September 2023, Mr. Muizzu, who emerged as a frontrunne­r from the opposition, ousted then President Ibrahim Mohamed Solih and rose to the country’s top oƒce, predominan­tly on an anti-India poll plank. However, Mr. Solih’s Maldivian Democratic Party (MDP) controlled the majority in parliament, making the passage of laws harder for the newly-elected President. The parliament­ary elections, earlier scheduled to be held on March 17, were postponed following an MDP-led vote in the legislatur­e.

On Sunday, the Maldives will hold parliament­ary elections for 93 constituen­cies across the island nation. Over 2,84,663 voters are eligible to vote across 602 polling stations, including three stations abroad. As many as 368 candidates are vying for a seat in the legislatur­e, according to the Elections Commission of the Maldives.

Since the run-up to the presidenti­al election last year, the Maldives’s political landscape has witnessed considerab­le fragmentat­ion. Former President Mohamed Nasheed and his supporters left the then-ruling MDP to form the Democrats, while ssures between former President Abdulla Yameen and Mr. Muizzu became more pronounced.

New party

Subsequent­ly, Mr. Yameen, who was earlier jailed on graft and money-laundering charges, formed a new party, the People’s National Front (PNF), and decided to eld his own candidates.

Some of them will contest as independen­t candidates, since the party could not be registered in time for the polls, local media reported.

E˜ectively, two major camps that dominated the Maldives’ political scene over the last ve years have now split into four, in addition to other parties with a small parliament­ary presence. Mr. Yameen was freed last week after the Maldives High Court overturned his conviction and 11-year prison sentence, deeming the lower court’s ruling unfair.

If the 2023 presidenti­al poll was dominated by Mr. Muizzu’s “India Out” campaign, attacking Mr. Solih’s foreign policy, Sunday’s parliament­ary elections will be fought on key domestic issues, according to political observers. Economic strain, employment, and crucial infrastruc­ture developmen­t in the atolls are issues that have drawn attention in the campaign. In January, Adam Azim from the opposition MDP won the crucial mayoral election in the capital Male by a huge margin, while the candidate from Mr. Muizzu’s People’s National Congress (PNC) lost.

 ?? ?? Poll bugle: Mohamed Muizzu, centre, along with his supporters take part in an election campaign rally in Male on Saturday.
Poll bugle: Mohamed Muizzu, centre, along with his supporters take part in an election campaign rally in Male on Saturday.

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