Kuwait Times

Maldives resists court order to free dissidents, shuts parliament

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MALE: Maldivian authoritie­s yesterday announced an indefinite postponeme­nt of parliament as President Abdulla Yameen’s regime resisted internatio­nal pressure to comply with a landmark Supreme Court order to free political prisoners. The People’s Majlis, or parliament, told local reporters in a brief message that the assembly will not have its scheduled sessions tomorrow “due to security reasons”. No fresh date was given for the sessions.

The move followed a shock order Thursday by the country’s Supreme Court to release nine political dissidents. It also restored the seats of 12 legislator­s who had been sacked for defecting from Yameen’s party. The reinstatem­ent of the dozen legislator­s has given the opposition a majority in the 85-member assembly, and it can now potentiall­y impeach Yameen as well as his cabinet.

The beleaguere­d president announced yesterday that he sacked police chief Ahmed Saudhee, who was appointed just two days ago. His predecesso­r Ahmed Areef was fired on Thursday, shortly after he said he will honor the court’s decision. The main opposition Maldivian Democratic Party (MDP) said Yameen was yet to release any political prisoners. “Although Yameen has said he will abide by the ruling, he is yet to comply with the order delivered more than 36 hours ago,” Colombobas­ed MDP spokesman Hamid Abdul Ghafoor said yesterday morning.

The court had said that cases against the nine dissidents, including MDP leader and former president Mohamed Nasheed, were politicall­y motivated and asked the government to release them immediatel­y. In a statement issued overnight, the joint opposition, which includes Nasheed’s MDP, said there were concerns the regime would ignore the ruling and that it would trigger further unrest in the nation of 340,000 Sunni Muslims. “We are deeply fearful that the government’s refusal to implement the Supreme Court order could escalate to unrest and incite violence across the country,” the opposition said.

Nasheed, the country’s first democratic­ally-elected president, has urged the government to respect the top court’s decision. The United Nations, Australia, Britain, Canada, India and the United States welcomed the court’s decision as a move towards restoring democracy in the politicall­y troubled Indian Ocean nation. Earlier, Nasheed had said the ruling cleared the way for him to return to the Maldives and contest elections due later this year. “I can contest and will contest,” he told AFP in the Sri Lankan capital Colombo. —AFP

 ??  ?? COLOMBO: In this file photo, former president of the Maldives Mohamed Nasheed (center) arrives for a press conference. Tensions ran high in the Maldives on Friday after a shock Supreme Court decision to clear the exiled former president and eight other...
COLOMBO: In this file photo, former president of the Maldives Mohamed Nasheed (center) arrives for a press conference. Tensions ran high in the Maldives on Friday after a shock Supreme Court decision to clear the exiled former president and eight other...

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