Maldives: Road to reconciliation has to be smooth
N Sathiya Moorthy
The Opposition Maldivian
Democratic Party (MDP) has to be congratulated for the belated decision to
return to Parliament and the reported interest in reviving the all-party talks.
Already, Parliament has reconvened and the Government parties, it can be
expected, would process the suggestion for reviving the talks once President
Mohammed Waheed returns home from his US trip.
The MDP's participation in Parliament and promise
to rejoin the talks - the latter reportedly indicated to PPM parliamentary group
leader Abdulla Yameen by none other than former President Mohammed Nasheed - are
clear on specifics. The party wants both Parliament and the political
negotiations to address reforms to 'independent constitutional institutions' as
indicated by the report of the Commission of National Inquiry (CoNI).
The report, as may be recalled, had upheld the
constitutional validity of power-transfer effected on President Nasheed's
resignation on February 7 and had recommended on issues of common concern, over
which there has been across-the-board unanimity of sorts. There are differences
over phraseology and details - as between the need for 'institutional reforms',
as sought by the MDP and 'institutional empowerment' - but no political party in
the Government has seriously contested the need for a re-look at the independent
institutions and their functioning.
In fact, parties are also united on the need for
looking at the CoNI recommendations in this regard. It is not impossible to
achieve much of this before the deadline possibly set by the presidential polls
due this time next year, if political parties put 'national interest' and
'national reconciliation' ahead of petty political agendas and electoral tactic
in the coming weeks and months. After all, the very same players could give
themselves a new Constitution some four years back the same way, and there is no
reason why they could not do so again.
It is all written into the script of dynamic
democracies, all through. Rather, for democracies to retain its characteristics,
they have to have dynamic processes of consultations, accommodation and
readjustments. By the same token it is not about what has not been achieved at
any given point in time but what has been achieved still -- despite the inherent
contradictions, constituency interests and political compulsions of the
stake-holders. It thus implies that the proposed reforms need not be sweeping
and all-serving. It can make a start, but with a clear idea as to which road
would have to be travelled further, not again and again. This requires a sense
of accommodation.
Boycotting courts
It is in this context the recent MDP national
council's decision "not to observe the authority" of the courts sends out a
jarring note. It flows from the criminal case against President Nasheed and
others, on the charges of the Maldivian National Defence Force (MNDF) illegally
detaining criminal court judge Mohammed Abdulla on January 16.Citing the party
decision, President Nasheed stayed away from the suburban Hulhumale court trying
the case on October 1, and proceeded on a campaign tour of the southern atolls.
The court has since directed the police to
produce President Nasheed on Sunday. Nasheed's lawyers also did not appear
before the three-judge trial Bench. While directing the police to produce
President Nasheed, the court has observed that he has not given any reason for
not participating in the trial. It is anybody's guess how the police did not
restrain him from leaving Male for the southern atolls with more than adequate
pre-publicity and in full glare of the media when he was under 'island arrest'
ahead of the commencement of the trial.
Translated, the term 'island arrest' means that
an accused in a criminal case has to stay put in the island where the trial is
taking place and appear before the courts whenever required. It may sound an
archaic part of legal procedures, suited to the times when inter-island and
inter-atoll transport facilities were inadequate, and may be among the
provisions requiring a review - either by the judiciary on its own or by the
legislature, or both. Such a review could also be considered for such penalties
as 'banishment', still contained in the Maldivian penal laws.
Yet, near-similar provisions exist elsewhere too,
where an accused in criminal cases are directed by courts to leave, or not
leave, the jurisdiction of such other courts of police stations and also report
to them periodically, pending the conclusion of the trial. The possibility of
the accused exerting influence over the witnesses is often cited as the reason
for such directives by the court. The alternative to such 'bail conditions' is
for the accused in criminal cases in these countries - neighbouring India and
Sri Lanka included - to return to jail, pending the conclusion of the trial and
the pronouncement of the verdict.
In deciding to boycott the courts, the MDP seems
to have concluded that they could not expect justice from the existing system.
Even as they agitated for 'institutional reforms', this was the judiciary they
had inherited and they had left behind when President Nasheed was in office. Not
that they were happy about, but in the eyes of law, the constitution of the
Supreme Court Bench, however controversial and however perceived to be partisan
it might have been, had the approval of the Government and the President of the
day. Having agitated for further reforms, it may now be up to the MDP as the
majority party in Parliament to initiate the process and specifics of such
reforms under the Executive Presidency scheme with the Government parties still
in a minority in Parliament.
By not submitting to the authority of the
nation's courts, the MDP nominee runs the risk of adding to the litany of
criminal cases that the party expects would be heaped on him, if left
unchallenged. The place to agitate the position again should be the courts, and
Third World democracy, that too in the neighbourhood, is full of instances,
where political party leaders in particular have played within the walls of the
existing scheme for tactical approaches whose legality could be questioned only
in a higher court.
At present, President Nasheed in this specific
case has already run the risk of adding on to the offences listed against him.
The party has called the original criminal charges against him in ordering the
arrest of Judge Abdulla as 'politically motivated'. However, absence from the
court, attracting 'contempt of court' charges stand on a different footing. They
are offences in themselves, punishable with a six-month prison term as penalty,
complicating his chances of contesting the presidential polls even more.
Already, the MDP apprehends - and has not minced words in giving expression to
such expression - that the original criminal case, as also two defamation cases
filed against him - were aimed at impeding his path to the presidential polls.
Before leaving Male for the southern atolls this
time, President Nasheed is reported to have asked all concerned to review their
position on the criminal cases against him. He may have a point. At the end of
the day, there is a political process involved in the independent handling of
the criminal cases being independently handled by the Prosecutor-General's (PG)
office. Those processes, and appeals based on facts, law and their
constitutionality, do not apply to contempt of court proceedings. These are
often 'open-and-shut' cases, as the phrase is understood.
Otherwise, the MDP may have to revisit its
national council decision to see if one such as this one on boycotting courts
would draw adverse decisions from the Election Commission, another 'independent
institution' under the Constitution. In such a case, the party would only itself
have to blame - for confusing tactic and strategy, ideology and adaptability in
a dynamic democracy. While numbers are the MDP's strength, and so is the
conviction of those followers, it should be allowed to operate within the
inherent limitations that the party has inherited under the multi-party scheme
until it has been able to 'convert' the rest, or adapt the constitutional means
to reach where it wants the nation to be - or, both.
Midnight killing of MP
These developments came ahead of the midnight
killing of PPM Member of Parliament, Dr Afrasheen Ali, a religious scholar, on
the staircase of his Male home. The incident occurred on the 'UN International
Day of Non-Violence', commemorating the birth anniversary of Mahatma Gandhi,
India's non-violence icon, who fought the British colonial rulers without sword
and guns - and won Independence for his deeply-divisive country by promoting
unity of purpose and conviction about the cause and the process. Gandhiji
punished himself for whatever he perceived as the sins of his followers, and
would fast for days until they atoned, and subjected himself readily to the
rules, laws and courts of the colonial ruler, without question. His was a battle
born out of conviction, and remained one until the very end.
Whatever the motive and whoever the killers, the
midnight massacre of a Member of Parliament has come at a difficult time for
Maldives, when the nation for readjusting to the post-CoNI ground realities.
These realities pertained to an end to the MDP street-protests over the
circumstances leading to President Nasheed's resignation and at the same time
leading to a political decision by his party to boycott the nation's courts,
instead. Just a day old, the murder will take the police time to resolve, though
it could also revive the national discourse on the need for more reforms in more
areas - this one, involving the police and criminal investigations.
Sure enough, Maldives as a nation, and the
capital city of Male, accounting for a third of the nation's 400,000-minus
population lives, has begun limping back to normalcy of some sort when the MP's
killing has shocked and rocked the nation as none before in recent times. This
had been preceded by the crude killing of a senior advocate by a drug-addict and
his girl-friend some months ago, but which was resolved promptly by the police
force. What is also at stake thus is the continuance of a peaceful political
atmosphere, law and order situation, at a time when the country can do with more
tourists and more tourist resorts to egg on the nation away from the economic
perils that it finds itself now - and again! Even more important is for the
nation and its population to recreate that sense of security and safety, which
Maldivians have prided themselves through years of unprecedented and
un-calibrated growth, where social equity and societal tranquillity have often
been victims elsewhere.
The road ahead
For the post-CoNI reconciliation efforts to be
meaningful and purposeful, there is an urgent need to create the right political
and social atmosphere. The responsibility for this rests with all stake-holders,
but the initiative has to come from the government of the day. The criminal
cases against President Nasheed, for instance, belonged to a particular point in
the contemporary political history of the nation. It also owed to the kind of
political climate that the present-day government parties contributed in equal
measure, if not more, when they were in the Opposition. Today, the shoe is on
the other foot, and no great national purpose would be served - instead, it
could tantamount to dis-service after a point - if there is no attempt at
national reconciliation as much in spirit as in word. To that extent, if either
side feels strongly and sincerely about reconciliation, they need to smoothen
out the road ahead, and at the same time, smoothen out the edges, too.
Before President Nasheed, his predecessor Maumoon
Abdul Gayoom had worked on reconciliation in his own way. Maybe late in
recognising the realities of the new era as they dawned on him, President Gayoom
reconciled himself first, and reconciled with the rest, over what needs to be
done, and how it needs to be done. Both he and President Nasheed after him
reconciled themselves to the ground realities - based at times on numbers in
vibrant democracies - by respectively providing for a smooth transfer of power
on the one hand, and absence of legal recrimination for what had been done or
not done while in power in the past. Much of it seems to have been undone over a
short span, and there is an urgent need for the nation as a whole to walk that
path - and together - all over again!
(The writer is a Senior Fellow at Observer
Research Foundation)