Maldives: CoNI report holds power-transfer legal
N Sathiya Moorthy
The
five-member Commission of National Inquiry (CoNI), attested by the international
community, has found no proof to a plot or coup d'etat behind the sudden
resignation of then Maldivian President Mohammed 'Anni' Nasheed on February 7.
Instead, it found evidence of indiscipline in the ranks of the Maldivian
National Defence Force (MNDF), whose legality could not be extended to the
Maldivian Police Force (MPF), whose elements had participated in the Opposition
political protests, demanding such resignation.
"There was no illegal coercion or intimidation, nor anycoupd'etat. The
Commission has received no evidence supporting or to substantiate these
allegations," said the 62-page report presented to President Mohammed Waheed
Hassan Manik by CoNI Co-Chair and Commonwealth nominee G P Selvam, a retired
Judge from Singapore on Thursday "A coup d' etat required a positive action
against President Nasheed. Non-action and inaction cannot constitute a coup
d'etat. Moreover, the Constitution does not call for loyalty of anyone to the
President. It calls for loyalty to the Constitution," the Commission said
further, after discussing the meaning and application of the term in various
circumstances. This observation becomes relevant in the context of President
Nasheed's claims and charges since a day after his resignation that the
circumstances constituted a "classic case" of a coup.
"There appears nothing contestable in constitutional terms under the generic
notion of a 'coup d'état' that is alleged to have occurred - quite to the
contrary, in fact," the report said. "In terms of the democratic intent and
legitimacy of the authority of the presidency, as foreseen in the Constitution,
President Waheed properly succeeded President Nasheed…As President Nasheed
clearly resigned and now challenges the voluntariness and legitimacy of his
action, the onus is on him to establish illegal coercion or unlawful
intimidation." In this context, Parliament Speaker AbdullahShahid's office
issued a statement after the publication of the CoNI Report that the
Constitution did not empower him to change the rules of presidential
resignations. Instead, it conferred on the Speaker of the People's Majlis only
the powers to swear-in a new President, then Vice-President Waheed in this case.
The report has thus silenced further questions on the constitutionality and
legality of the post-resignation succession by then Vice-President Waheed. "As
there was no illegally coerced resignation of the President on February 7, and
as the subsequent transfer of power followed precisely the prescriptions of the
Constitution, the Commission has no recommendation on these matters," it said,
while indicating the need for capacity-building in the Maldivian Police Force in
particular The commission also recommended the need for improving the image of
the Maldivian judiciary, as a performer, and recommended the need for what could
be dubbed as 'institutional reforms', about which the Governments of Presidents
Nasheed and Waheed have made repeated references.The report itself concludes by
saying, "Overall, Maldives needs to be assisted in strengthening the rule of law
such that the institutions of the State may enjoy the public confidence
necessary for a democratic society."
The report otherwise found no evidence to link any of the 67 persons named by
President Nasheed to any coup of any kind. The list included President Waheed
and former President MaumoonGayoom. Specific instances of examination of SMS
messages, bank transactions and other material sought by President Nasheed
showed up nothing to substantiate his claim of a coup, the Commission said.
Hence that line of examination was not pursued after a point, the probe team
indicated. In particular, it contested President Nasheed's claim that
present-day Defence Minister and retired Army Colonel, Ahmed Nazim, had
threatened him personally, pointing out that they had met for the first time on
the occasion only after he had submitted his resignation.
The commission also cited evidence given by then MDP Defence Minister
TholathIbrahim Kaleyfaanuthat he had not said anything of the kind to Home
Minister Afeef, who had attested to President Nasheed's claims in this regard at
the probe. Other witnessed also did not back President Nasheed in it, the probe
found. Independent of their diverse positions before the CoNI, both President
Nasheed and Tholath have been charged before a suburban Hulhulumale court with
the illegal detention of Criminal Court Chief Judge Abdulla Mohammed on January
16, contributing in a way to the events of February 6-8. With the High Court
since upholding the jurisdictional aspects after the lower court had doubted the
same, the Government can be expected to proceed vigorously in the matter.
India vindicated
Though CoNI was only a fact-finding mission with no legal trappings, its
findings could be said to be a 4-1 ruling, after Ahmed 'Gahaa' Sayeed, nominee
of President Nasheed's Maldivian Democratic Party (MDP) quit the panel after
having accessed the draft, prepared by Judge Selvam and going to town on its
purported contents, out of turn and in violation of the confidentiality
principle governing such conduct. President Nasheed himself had then called for
a people's overthrow of the 'illegal government'. However, the MDP has also
expressed the hope that the post-publication all-party conference called by
President Waheed would be free and fair. Reports from the national capital of
Male indicate that there is palpable tension in the air, after the MDP went on
the protest-mode all over again.
The security forces have since indicated that they would not like to take
chances this time. Caught unawares by the belated MDP reaction to the
resignation a day after, on February 8, and the way street-violence and arson
spread across the Indian Ocean archipelago, the security forces had indicated
that they would swing into action without notice this time, if violence erupted.
They had maintained a relatively low profile through the various phases of MDP
street protests since, but this trend may not continue. While the CoNI Report
has reprimanded them for using excessive force on February 8, armed now with the
probe finding that it was not a coup after all, the Government too would not
hesitate to treat MDP protests as a law and order problem, and not any more as a
legitimate political protest, as earlier. Sections within the multi-party
political leadership in the Government had sought to dub the unprecedented
February 8 violence as 'terrorism' and have been urging the authorities to
initiate legal action, accordingly.
In this, the Government may be encouraged to act but also be restrained at the
same time from over-reacting by the international community's response to the
CoNI Report. As was the case with the early recognition conferred on the Waheed
presidency, and thus attesting to the non-controversial nature of President
Nasheed's resignation until it was whipped up later, India called upon the
stake-holders in Maldives to accept the CoNI Report. Now after the report was
out, the MDP has dubbed it as 'legitimising the coup'. However, once the MDP's
mood became known with 'Gahaa' Sayeed's pre-publication pronouncements on the
report, New Delhi also called for restraint on all sides. India was the first
country to recognise the transfer of power as legal and constitutional, and the
probe report in a way has thus vindicated the same. The crucial decision at the
critical hour in contemporary Maldivian history also helped the international
community engage the new Government in Male, in ways its political adversaries
in the MDP wanted engaged.
"We believe it is essential for all stakeholders to demonstrate a sense of
responsibility in respecting the outcome of the Commission's report, and to
express views on the report of the CoNI with calm and restraint," the Indian
statement said ahead of the publication of the report. "Actions that might
adversely impact on the atmosphere of peace and tranquillity in Maldives need to
be avoided," it urged. The statement expressed the Indian hope that "all
political parties in Maldives would take up the issues arising out of the C0NI
report through a peaceful political dialogue, to make a way forward for
resolving the political situation in the country."
In this context, the Indian statement referred to President Waheed's New Delhi
visit in early May. "We have also held dialogue with the leaders of main
political parties in that country. India remains committed to extending its
fullest support and cooperation for the continued stability, peace, progress and
prosperity of Maldives," the statement said further. To India's credit, and of
its diplomatic corps, the CoNI report has attested the Indian position from the
very start that the transfer of power was constitutional and President Waheed's
succession was legitimate. As may be recalled, President Nasheed and the MDP
beginning days after the transfer of power began claiming that India was "not
fully informed" about the developments when it chose to recognise the Waheed
presidency, and even named Indian officials in this regard.
The US, UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, among others, too have welcomed the
CoNI findings after they were released. They too had recognised the Waheed
regime without much loss of time. The Commonwealth and UN observers in the CoNI
team too have endorsed the findings wholesale. As may be recalled, the Nasheed
camp had received international sympathy when the coup charge came to be made,
and the UN and the Commonwealth Ministerial Action Group (CMAG) in particular
had called for free and fair probe into those allegations. Later, when President
Waheed named his team, they argued the MDP case for representation and
international participation in the probe.
Now with the CoNI report finding no proof to substantiate President Nasheed's
legal and political charges, Minister of State for Foreign Affairs, DunyaMaumoon,
has lost no time since in urging the CMAG to remove Maldives from its list,
indicating that there was no need in the first place to have put the country
there in the first place. It is not unlikely that elements from within the
present Government and the parties that they represent may go overboard on the
early inferences of a section of the international community and their
insistence on an independent probe, which however has vindicated their claims.
There could thus be a demand elsewhere that the international community did not
resort to sweeping positions on internal matters of individual nations without
ascertaining the facts on the ground, as should have been seen and perceived.
Where from here?
In an address to the nation after receiving the report from Justice Selvam,
President Waheed said that the events of February 6-7 were in large measure
reactions to the actions of President Nasheed."It has now become clear that the
transfer of power on 7 February was legitimate," the President said. "Therefore
it is time to stop questioning the legitimacy of the Government. It is time to
stop illegal activities and activities that go against generally acceptable
social norms. With the CoNI's report, many things have become clear. The
Maldivian people too would come to understand this once they read the report.
This is now the time to stop brutality. This is the time for political leaders
to show their leadership and the time to put the nation's interest before
individual interests. This is the time to learn from lessons of the past and the
time for peaceful dialogue and constructive consultation."
In this context, President said that he would implement the five recommendations
contained in the CoNI report. He also referred to the dead-locked parliamentary
proceedings, and added: "It is imperative that sittings of the People's
Majlisresume in order implement these reforms."
President Dr Waheed said that the consultative process that he had earlier
initiated with the political parties would recommence tonight with a fresh
resolve. "I am hopeful that the consultations amongst parties would happen in a
cordial and friendly environment," he hoped.
Apart from the five-point recommendations, the CoNI report is significant and
even more relevant in the context of establishing that there was no plot or coup
behind President Nasheed's resignation, and particularly no role for his
constitutionally-mandated successor. Pending the probe, the MDP had variously
demanded early polls to the presidency if CoNI upheld the plot theory, shifting
gears more recently to seek President Nasheed's reinstatement, without reference
to President Waheed's original offer in this regard. The Constitution does not
provide for either, and even early elections would require a constitutional
amendment with two-thirds majority in the Majlis. The CoNI findings have thus
also cleared the lingering residues of tentativeness attaching to the Waheed
presidency.
In political terms, however, the non-tentative nature of the findings could
contribute to instability of a different kind. With presidential polls now not
expected before they become due in the July-November window next year,
Government parties would return to the inevitable game of political
one-upmanship against one another in the interim. The inherent nature of the
Maldivian electoral politics, as brought out in the very first democratic polls
of 2008, implied coalition at the hustings, which President Nasheed breached
after assuming office. With the upcoming presidential polls still being seen as
wide open, unhidden aspirations among the Government party leaders and the
tentative nature of their approach to identifying partner or partners could
jeopardise the functioning of the Government between now and then, particularly
when political stability and fiscal management are crying for immediate and
forceful attention. Any wrong and prolonged move by them could prove their
detractors right, though not necessarily in a way that the latter might have
wanted.
There is a need however for the Government in the post-CoNI months not to
convert their urge for speedy justice into political witch-hunting of sorts.
While civil laws and criminal investigations can be citied to justify
politically-motivated decisions of the kind, it should not lead to further
destabilisation of the infant democracy, which cannot be allowed totter on
endlessly for no fault of the system or the scheme, but only of the adoption,
adaptation and implementation of the same. Both the polity and society in the
country are going through the processes of democracy learning and democratic
co-existence. There is no room in multi-party democracies for competitive
witch-hunting, which elsewhere has destabilises polities and destroyed
societies. President Waheed, in his wisdom, as the voice of sanity should
provide the balanced approach that the nation can do with. The healthy precedent
set by President Nasheed on assuming office, and declaring that the Government
would not go after predecessor President Gayoom, should be a pointer for
Governments now and in the future. They also can learn from the intervening
decisions and actions of the Nasheed Government, which is what contributed to
the present situation.
The MDP and President Nasheed may be expected to use the available time until
next year's polls, to restructuring the party and make it more widely acceptable
than already. They got the probe they wanted, but they may not have got the
probe report they had hoped for. That should not egg them on to the streets all
over again, when their political detractors now in power may be offered legal
teeth and political justification to deal with such situations in ways they are
dealt with in other democracies, too. Instead, as President Nasheed had outlined
after his recent visit to India, the MDP should accept the CoNI finding with
grace and dignity that both deserve, and address greater aspects of democratic
duties that the party's unassailable position as the nation's first and largest
democratic political party entails and expects.
With the uni-dimensional focus of the party and the nation remaining on
President Nasheed in the years after he assumed office, the MDP also needs to
look at new strategies to reach out to those voters now falling behind the pale
of the 'Anni charisma', which is as deep as it is wide. In the process, the
party could be expected to introspect on what had gone wrong through the past
years, and where correctives need to be applied in terms of concepts and
perspectives, beliefs and policies, programmes and propaganda. In doing so, the
party should be able to identify second-rung leaders capable of shouldering not
only organisational responsibilities but also sharing President Nasheed's
exclusive burden of being the MDP's sole vote-catcher when it can do with more
votes, too.
In an era of high-tech communication and conveyance, Maldives, unlike many other
Third World democracies in the post-War era, has telescoped its democratic
experience. Translated, it meant that the pains were as quick as coming as the
benefits. Through the smooth transfer of power, first in the election of
President Nasheed, later in the succession by President Waheed, and now through
the universality of acceptability for the CoNI report, the country has proved
that it is up to the task of nation-building in a multi-party system, as
different from a single-leader scheme, which had ruled Maldives for generations
and centuries before it. Hiccups remain, and would continue into the distant
future, but then that is also what popular democracy is all about. Maldives and
Maldivians would have to make the required changes in their own perceptions and
behaviours, based on experiences elsewhere and their own exposure now.
(The writer is a Senior Fellow at Observer Research Foundation)