Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Maldives ex-leader makes comeback in landmark vote

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MALE, April 6 ( AFP) - The Maldives on Saturday held its first parliament­ary election since former strongman leader Abdulla Yameen was forced to stand down, with his arch-rival expected to make a big comeback in the vote.

Mohamed Nasheed, another former president, is the highest profile candidate up for election for the 87-member People's Majlis, or parliament.

He returned from an enforced exile abroad after Yameen lost an election in September to Nasheed's deputy, Mohamed Ibrahim Solih.

Solih said he expected Saturday's poll to return a strong legislatur­e led by his Maldivian Democratic Party (MDP).

“I want to stress that I would like the next parliament to be made up of members who are familiar with our policies, and fully support it,” Solih told a campaign rally on Thursday night.

Nasheed is widely expected to play a key role in the new legislatur­e.

He was jailed for 13 years on a controvers­ial terrorism charge when Yameen was in power. However, the conviction was overturned last year after the presidency changed.

The opposition coalition that helped Solih win has come apart, with constituen­t parties going their separate ways for Saturday's election.

Election commission­er Ahmed Shareef told reporters preparatio­ns had been completed for Saturday's vote and there had been no complaints of irregulari­ties.

Voting will take place for overseas Maldivians in neighbouri­ng India and Sri Lanka, as well as London.

Former president Yameen is not a candidate, but his Progressiv­e Party of Maldives is seen as the main challenger to the MDP.

Last week, the High Court ordered authoritie­s to lift a freeze on Yameen's bank accounts holding about $6.5 million. But it said a money laundering case against him would proceed.

Yameen received the payments just before he lost his re-election bid. Since then, all dissidents have returned to the Indian Ocean archipelag­o and most have had their conviction­s quashed.

The Maldives was on the verge of being slapped with Western- led sanctions before Solih won the presidenti­al election on a pledge to end corruption in the country best known for its luxury tourism.

 ?? ?? Maldivians living in Sri Lanka wait to cast their votes at a polling station for the country's parliament­ary election at the Maldives embassy in Colombo, Apr 6. (Photo by Lakruwan Wanniarach­chi / AFP)
Maldivians living in Sri Lanka wait to cast their votes at a polling station for the country's parliament­ary election at the Maldives embassy in Colombo, Apr 6. (Photo by Lakruwan Wanniarach­chi / AFP)

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