Muscat Daily

Yameen seeks second term amid rigging fears

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Colombo, Sri Lanka - Voting was extended in the Maldives presidenti­al election on Sunday amid technical glitches, after police raided the opposition’s campaign headquarte­rs, fuelling fears of rigging in favour of Chinafrien­dly incumbent President Abdulla Yameen.

The Elections Commission said balloting was extended by three hours until 7pm (1400 GMT) because of technical glitches with tablet computers containing electoral rolls, and officials had to use manual systems to verify voters.

Many voters said they stood in line for over five hours to vote in many parts of the Indian Ocean archipelag­o, as well as in neighbouri­ng Sri Lanka and India where expatriate Maldivians voted.

‘Eight hours & counting. Waiting to exercise my democratic right! Let’s do this, Insha Allah!,’ former foreign minister Dunya Maumoon said on Twitter.

Maumoon, who is also the estranged niece of Yameen and daughter of former president Maumoon Abdul Gayoom, voted at a polling booth in the Maldivian Embassy in Colombo.

Yameen, who is expected to retain power, has imprisoned or forced into exile almost all his main rivals in a crackdown. Critics say he is returning the honeymoon island nation to authoritar­ian rule.

The process is being closely watched by regional rivals India and China, who are jostling to influence Indian Ocean nations. The European Union and United States, meanwhile, have threatened sanctions if the vote is not free and fair.

Yameen voted minutes after polling booths opened in the capital Male, where opposition campaign efforts had been frustrated by a media crackdown and police harassment.

Before polls opened, police raided the campaign headquarte­rs of the opposition Maldivian Democratic Party (MDP) and searched the building for several hours in a bid to stop what they called ‘illegal activities’. There were no arrests.

Yameen’s challenger, the relatively unknown Ibrahim Mohamed Solih, also cast his vote.

Solih has the backing of a united opposition trying to oust Yameen. It has struggled for visibility with the electorate because the media is fearful of falling foul of heavy-handed decrees and reporting restrictio­ns.

Mohamed Nasheed, who was elected president of a newly-democratic Maldives in 2008 but who now lives in exile, urged the internatio­nal community to reject the results of the election.

There were long queues in Male and at embassies abroad, where the opposition had urged Maldivians to turn out and vote.

 ?? (AFP) ?? A woman (left) assists her elderly mother to cast her ballot at a polling station in Male on Sunday
(AFP) A woman (left) assists her elderly mother to cast her ballot at a polling station in Male on Sunday

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