Maldivian Police arrest ex-President
Maldivian Police yesterday arrested the country’s first
democratically-elected President Mohamed Nasheed after he again failed
to turn up for the start of a trial for abuse of power, his party said.
“President Nasheed was grabbed from protesting supporters, arrested
and was taken away from Fares-Mathoda,” his Maldivian Democratic Party (MDP)
spokesman Hamid Abdul Ghafoor tweeted from a remote atoll in the Indian
Ocean archipelago.
The arrest came after a special court on Sunday ordered police to
arrest Nasheed, who had challenged the legality of a criminal trial
against him.
The magistrate court on the island of Hulhumale issued the arrest
warrant after Nasheed failed for a second time to show up before a
special three-judge bench set up to try him.
A court official said the warrant asked police to “keep Mr Nasheed in
custody until he is produced before the court”.
Nasheed resigned as president in February after what he described as
a coup.
The court case centres on Nasheed’s decision to send the military to
arrest a senior judge earlier this year. That fuelled simmering
anti-government protests, culminating in a police mutiny and Nasheed’s
downfall. In a statement issued hours before Nasheed’s arrest, the MDP
urged the international community to engage with Nasheed’s successor,
Mohamed Waheed, to maintain maximum restraint.
“The MDP strongly calls on the international community, our
development partners to immediately engage in dialogue with Dr. Waheed
to maintain maximum restraint and to not do anything that would disrupt
peace and stability of the country.”
Nasheed, who won the Maldives’ first democratic elections in 2008,
maintains he will not get a fair trial. If convicted he could be jailed
or banished to a remote island for three years, a punishment that could
bar him from future elections. The next elections are scheduled to take
place by July next year.
AFP
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