Maldives Supreme court sets new election in 6 days

The second round for the Maldives election was to have taken place on Sunday, but the runner-up Abdulla Yameen sought a delay, saying he needed time to campaign afresh.

The second round for the Maldives election was to have taken place on Sunday, but the runner-up Abdulla Yameen sought a delay, saying he needed time to campaign afresh.

The Maldives Supreme Court has suspended a presidential election run-off, after protests from a candidate.

On Saturday, ex-President Mohamed Nasheed polled nearly 47%, just short of the 50% needed for outright victory.

Mr Nasheed has been seeking to regain power after he was forced to resign in 2012, sparking a political crisis.

This is the third time the presidential elections have been derailed.

A vote on 7 September was annulled by the Supreme Court after one candidate, Gasim Ibrahim, alleged irregularities, despite observer groups deeming the vote free and fair. The court also introduced new guidelines for elections.

Mohamed Nasheed
Mr Nasheed came close to winning in the first round
Police then halted a planned re-run on 19 October saying the guidelines had not been met, after both Mr Gasim and Mr Yameen failed to approve the voter register.

This time, the run-off was planned for only one day after the first round, because the constitution stipulates there must be a new president by Monday.

Despite that legal deadline, the Supreme Court sitting late at night has now ruled that the run-off “cannot take place” and ought to be delayed by six days.

The court said the Sunday run-off might have “undermined the constitutional rights of many people”, agreeing with Mr Yameen’s assertion that he needs more time to campaign.

Mohamed Nasheed’s party and the Commonwealth’s special envoy, Don McKinnon, will probably be furious, reports the BBC’s Charles Haviland , as both had issued statements insisting there be no further delay to the voting process.

Constitutional deadline
Mohamed Nasheed won the Indian Ocean archipelago’s first-ever democratic vote in 2008, replacing Maumoon Abdul Gayoom, who ran the country autocratically for three decades.

On Saturday, Mr Nasheed polled 46.93% of vote, while Abdulla Yameen, the half-brother of Mr Gayoom, polled 29.73%.

hird-placed Gasim Ibrahim, a wealthy resort owner and a former minister under Mr Gayoom, was out of the running with 23.34%.

The suspension of Sunday’s voting means there cannot be a new president by the constitutional deadline of 11 November, when the term of current president President Mohamed Waheed Hassan ends.

The Supreme Court had already announced that the current president could stay on but Mr Hassan has said he doesn’t want to.

Besides, some army officers have been circulating an appeal calling on soldiers not to obey the current president beyond the legal expiry of his term at midnight on Sunday.

The Maldivian Democratic Party – to which Mr Nasheed belongs – has accused Mr Yameen of trying to “subvert democracy”.

The ex-president resigned last year after large sections of the security forces objected to his arrest of a controversial judge.

Since he left office, his mainly liberal supporters and more conservative sections of society have remained bitterly divided.

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Linda Hohnholz

Editor in chief for eTurboNews based in the eTN HQ.

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