Maldives’ former president plots comeback with ‘India Out’ campaign
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[March 25, 2022]
By Alasdair Pal and Mohamed Junayd
MALE (Reuters) - A former Maldives
president jailed on corruption charges has returned to politics with a
campaign against Indian influence in the country, worrying New Delhi,
which is battling China for supremacy in its own back yard.
Abdulla Yameen wants to cancel defence deals signed with India, with
which Maldives shares decades of close and friendly ties.
He alleges New Delhi has developed a major military presence in the
archipelago off the coast of Sri Lanka – claims the ruling party denies.
But the growth of the campaign since a graft conviction against Yameen
was overturned in November has drawn large crowds at rallies and
galvanized his Progressive Party of Maldives, seen as being closer to
Beijing.
“It not only endangers our national security but also impedes our
progress and development,” Yameen told Reuters in a rare interview in
the capital Male, referring to India's military presence.
“It's imperative that we get the Indian military out before the end of
this year. We certainly don't like to play second fiddle here in our own
country.”
“I don't want the Indian Ocean especially in our neighbourhood to be
militarized. I like this area to be a demilitarized zone. We don't like
to see any foreign power here,” he said, adding it could encourage other
nations like China and the United States to build up its presence in the
region.
Defence minister Mariya Didi told Reuters India's military presence in
the country was limited to the operation and maintenance of three
search-and-rescue and surveillance aircraft used by Maldives' defence
forces, as well as a medical team at a military hospital.
"There is no additional foreign military presence in Maldives," she
said.
Some of the deals with India Yameen is seeking to cancel were signed
during his own time in power, she added.
A spokesperson for India’s foreign ministry declined to comment on
Yameen’s claims. The ministry said last year that India “remains
committed to deepening its traditionally friendly relationship with
Maldives.”
KEY BATTLEGROUND
Lying near strategic shipping lanes in the Indian Ocean, Maldives is
critical in the battle for influence between India and China, which have
repeatedly clashed along their disputed Himalayan border in recent
years.
India’s Bollywood film industry and music are popular among locals, and
the ruling Maldivian Democratic Party has pursued what it has called an
“India-first” foreign policy, but China has made increasing inroads
since Yameen’s five-year term.
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Abdulla Yameen, chief of the Progressive Party of Maldives, meets
his supporters during an "India Out" protest rally in Naifaru,
Maldives, March 19, 2022. Picture taken March 19, 2022. Progressive
Party of Maldives/Handout via REUTERS
Yameen said he was still considering
whether to contest presidential polls due next year.
“I have returned. I don't think I ever left and I
don't think people left me either.”
The half-brother of former dictator Maumoon Abdul Gayoom, Yameen has
long played a major role in the islands’ fractious politics.
He helped to oust the country’s first democratically-elected
president, Mohamed Nasheed, in 2012, taking power in an election a
year later.
During his term, he made Maldives a part of Beijing’s Belt and Road
infrastructure initiative – a program the United States sees as a
way to trap smaller countries into debt.
China financed and built a bridge linking Male to the international
airport, as well as other critical infrastructure.
“Let's be frank with this. Europe or the U.S., they don't hand out
parcels of money for development. It's only China that does that,”
Yameen said.
Since his release, Yameen has been touring islands across the
archipelago in support of his campaign.
Local media reported threats have been made to Indian teachers
working on two different islands – a claim Yameen calls “total
rubbish”.
'TRUMPED UP CHARGES'
After losing power in 2018, Yameen was sentenced to five years in
jail and fined $5 million in 2019 for embezzling $1 million in state
funds, allegedly acquired through the lease of resort development
rights.
He was shifted to house arrest in 2020 and freed months later after
irregularities in that case were found, though prosecutors hope to
secure a conviction on two outstanding charges by the summer.
“Those are all trumped up charges,” Yameen said of the outstanding
cases against him, a diamond-encrusted watch on his right wrist.
(Reporting by Alasdair Pal and Mohamed Junayd; Editing by Shri
Navaratnam)
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