The Hindu (Tiruchirapalli)

With super majority in Majlis, Muizzu’s hands are strengthen­ed in Maldives

- Meera Srinivasan

The situation for Ukraine on its front line is likely to steadily deteriorat­e in coming weeks, Ukraine’s head of military intelligen­ce said in an interview published on Monday.

His assessment comes as outgunned and outmanned Ukrainian forces struggle to hold back Russian troops, who have gained ground in recent months and are expected to soon step up their o›ensive.

“In our opinion, a rather di”cult situation awaits us in the near future,” Kyrylo Budanov told the BBC’s Ukrainian service.

“But it is not catastroph­ic and we need to understand that. Armageddon will not happen, as many people are now saying,” he said. “But there will be problems starting from midMay. I am talking about the front in particular... It will be a di”cult period in midMay, early June,” Mr. Budanov said.

Kremlin’s gains

Russia has in recent weeks regularly claimed new gains in eastern Ukraine.

On Monday, Russia’s Defence Ministry said its troops had seized the village of Novomykhai­livka, some 20 km away from Vugledar, which Russian forces have been trying to capture.

It announced other gains near the eastern town of Chasiv Yar over the weekend.

Taking control of Chasiv Yar’s strategic heights would open the road for Russia to other important towns in the Donbas region of eastern Ukraine.

After his party won a decisive majority in Sunday’s general elections, Maldivian President Mohamed Muizzu has both executive powers and parliament­ary backing to shape the island nation’s policies for the next ve years.

Provisiona­l results showed that the ruling People’s National Congress (PNC) secured 71 out of the 93 seats in parliament or People’s Majlis, as it is known in the island nation.

The party was preparing to hold a huge celebratio­n titled “Welcome — to the People’s Nation’s Majlis”, in capital Male on Monday night.

Serious setback

The opposition Maldivian Democratic Party (MDP), which had put up a similar, impressive show in 2019, winning 65 out of 87 seats then, faced a serious setback in this election, losing in most constituen­cies. The party secured only a dozen seats.

Signicantl­y, candidates a”liated to the two new formations of former Presidents Abdulla Yameen and Mohamed Nasheed who split, respective­ly, from Mr. Muizzu and President Ibrahim Mohamed Solih, failed to win a single seat.

“I am still in some kind of shock, and trying to make sense of the results,” said Ibrahim Ismail, a former MP from the MDP, an academic and a prominent voice in the country’s pro-democracy reform

Mohamed Muizzu

movement since the early 2000s.

“This sort of threefourt­hs majority allows them to even rewrite the Constituti­on. And it’s always a red —ag when one party is able to do that in a democracy,” he told The Hindu from Male.

Mr. Ismail added that the new compositio­n also gave rise to fears over the possible underminin­g of the rule of law.

It is not that the MDP did not wield similar control over the last parliament, but some like Mr. Ismail see the current situation as being “very different”.

“How a party [PNC] that is not known to espouse democratic values might deal with such absolute power is a major concern. The MDP for all its internal weaknesses is a party rooted in democracy and human rights. Also, it o›ers more space for diverse voices and dissent within,” Mr. Ismail contended.

Internal ssures

While citing the MDP’s internal ssures, especially around the split of former President Nasheed, as one of the chief reasons for the electorate’s disillusio­nment with the party, the former MP said Mr. Solih “went overboard” with his ‘India First’ policy, much like his predecesso­r Mr. Yameen, who “did the same with China”.

All the same Mr.Muizzu’s detractors worry that his political camp’s ultranatio­nalist rhetoric may not bode well for balanced internatio­nal relations in the long run. “It is not ideal for small countries to tilt too much towards one power or the other,” Mr. Ismail observed.

Policy priorities

Mr. Muizzu’s foreign policy priorities are no secret. After making “India out” his poll plank in last year’s Presidenti­al race, he gave it policy direction, eventually getting New Delhi to agree to replace its military personnel with civilians. Around the same time, he pledged to elevate strategic ties with China.

According to Ahmed Mohamed, a former diplomat who served as the Maldives’s Ambassador to India during President Yameen’s term, the results of the general election in the Maldives only point to a continuing trend observed in the past two elections.

“There is a widespread belief among the public that in order to sustain progress, developmen­t, and prosperity, the government must secure an absolute majority in the Majlis,” he told The Hindu.

“Given this outcome, I do not anticipate any changes to the foreign policy of the Maldives,” he added.

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