MALDIVES VICE-PRESIDENT ARRESTED
In a surprising turn of
events, the Maldives arrested its Vice-President, Ahmed Adheeb Abdul Ghafoor,
on the charge of “high treason” on Saturday.arrest, announced in a tweet by
Umar Naseer, Home Affairs Minister of the island nation, was reportedly made to
stop Mr. Ghafoor from fleeing the country.At a press conference, the Maldives
Police Service said the arrest was made in connection with a powerful blast
which hit the Presidential boat on September 28.The blast, aimed at President Abdullah
Yameen, ended up injuring his wife and some of his colleagues.
The police said they were
compelled to arrest Mr. Ghafoor in view of the serious charges against him in
the case. The arrest has caused tumult in the Indian Ocean nation with one
Maldivian diplomat describing the situation in the capital, Male, as reflecting
a “political emergency”.The arrest has hit travel of important figures to
India. Former President Maumoon Abdul Gayoom has postponed his weekend trip.India’s
External Affairs Ministry has maintained silence despite the fact that Mr.
Yameen had reiterated his “India First” policy during External Affairs Minister
Sushma Swaraj’s visit to the island nation this month.
The ties between Ahmed
Adheeb Abdul Ghafoor, 33, Maldivian Vice-President, who was arrested on
Saturday on the charge of “high treason”, and President Abdullah Yameen have
soured considerably in recent months, official sources in the island nation
told The Hindu requesting anonymity.The former had become a vocal critic of Mr.
Yameen’s domestic and international policies. Mr. Ghafoor had been receiving
support from Islamist parties, some of whose leaders were taken into preventive
custody before his arrest.He is among the youngest in the history of the Maldives
to occupy the post and the second senior political figure after former
President Mohammed Nasheed to be arrested. Mr. Ghafoor was sworn in as the
fifth Vice-President on July 22.The Maldivian courts have in recent months come
in for intense criticism by human rights organisations. Hasan Zahir, former
president of the Maldives Journalists Association, told The Hindu that the
trial of the Vice-President would be another protracted one as the details of
the case were shrouded in secrecy.
Prof. John Kurakar
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