The Star Malaysia

Elections on, elections off

Maldives’ EC officials give two versions of presidenti­al polls

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COLOMBO: The Maldives’ Election Commission has sparked confusion over whether elections originally scheduled for this weekend but suspended by the Supreme Court would go ahead on the troubled Indian Ocean archipelag­o.

The chief of the independen­t election body Fuad Thaufeeq told local media late Thursday that voting would take place in defiance of the Supreme Court order, which has been criticised by the internatio­nal community.

But his deputy, as well as the commission’s spokesman, denied any intention to hold the polls, indicating a schism had formed within a crucial institutio­n in the young democracy.

“We will not go against the law,” deputy elections chief Ahmed Fayaz said. “We will not have elections on Saturday, unless the Supreme Court removes the suspension order.”

He said they were merely going ahead with the preparatio­ns for the elections today in case the court changes its mind.

“Please be informed that still we are just continuing our preparatio­ns,” commission spokesman Aishath Reema said yesterday.

The local Haveeru newspaper reported that the Supreme Court on Thursday night ordered troops to stop any moves to go ahead with the vote.

The top court halted the election on Monday following a legal challenge, sparking protests, fears of fresh instabilit­y and expression­s of concern from India, the United States and the European Union.

The candidate who placed third in the first round of voting on Sept 7, wealthy businessma­n Qasim Ibrahim, demanded that the results be annulled over alleged discrepanc­ies. The case is pending.

The vote was seen as a test for the democracy a year and a half after the violent ousting of its first democratic­ally elected president, Mohamed Nasheed who came to power in 2008.

Nasheed, 46, won the first round comfortabl­y with 45.45% of the vote and faced a run-off against Abdullah Yameen, the half-brother of the islands’ former autocrat Maumoon Abdul Gayoom. — AFP

 ??  ?? Artistic licence: Protesters holding a white underwear and a cartoon outside the courthouse over the court’s decision to suspend the run-off presidenti­al elections in Male. — AFP
Artistic licence: Protesters holding a white underwear and a cartoon outside the courthouse over the court’s decision to suspend the run-off presidenti­al elections in Male. — AFP

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