Maldives' honyemoon with democracy over: President
COLOMBO: The president of the Maldives said the islands' “honeymoon with
democracy” was coming to an end as the tourist paradise marked its first
anniversary on Thursday of the toppling of his predecessor.
Mohamed Waheed, 60, who came to power after Mohamed Nasheed, the nation's first
democratically-elected leader resigned following street protests and a police
mutiny, said the Maldives had done better than other emerging democracies.
“Democracy is in its infancy (in the Maldives),” Waheed said in an e-mail
interview with AFP. “Despite a few hiccups, I am very optimistic about our
democratic future.
“As our honeymoon with democracy nears its end... I am convinced that a new
model for true democracy will glow from these islands.” The Maldives was known
as a popular honeymoon destination, but political unrest has dented its image in
the past year. Waheed said he was likely to offer himself as a candidate at the
Sept.7 elections that were announced on Wednesday. His former boss Nasheed faces
several court cases that could disqualify him. Nasheed says the cases are
politically motivated and designed to exclude him from the elections.
Waheed said his full year in office was marked by “inclusiveness” and rejected
opposition claims that he was stifling individual freedoms and had become a
hostage of extremists in the nation of 330,000 Muslims.
“In view of the current achievements and the general reading I get from the
public, I have not ruled out the option of candidature,” Waheed said. “However,
much work has still to be done during the next few months.” A
Commonwealth-supervised investigation rejected Nasheed's claim of a coup and
upheld that Waheed, the then deputy to Nasheed, became president in line with
the constitution.
Agence France-Presse