Friday, February 10, 2012

Ex-president threatens Maldives protests

AL Jazeera English Central & South Asia
Mohamed Nasheed, who says he was ousted in a coup, threatens more street protests and demands snap elections.
Last Modified: 10 Feb 2012 20:20

The former president of the Maldives has demanded new elections and called for mass street protests if the new government does not relent, raising the prospect of a protracted political crisis on the Indian Ocean islands.
Mohamed Nasheed, who says his resignation earlier in the week was forced by a coup, remained free on Friday despite an arrest warrant against him as diplomats, including a UN envoy, worked to forestall renewed violence.
He demanded his successor and former vice president, Mohamed Waheed, step down and hand power to the speaker of the parliament for two months, until a new presidential poll can be called.
Before Nasheed resigned his presidency, the next election had been scheduled for October 2013.
"Fresh elections are our bottom line and we are not relying on the international community for that, we are relying on the people of the Maldives," Nasheed told reporters. "The medicine here is on the streets, in strength."
But in an interview on Friday, Waheed told Al Jazeera that Nasheed's approach could become dangerous.
"I cannot protect him if he continues to do this kind of thing," Waheed told Al Jazeera's Steve Chao. The new president also said that Nasheed had been acting "autocratic in so many ways".
A warrant was issued on Thursday for Nasheed's arrest, but the warrant's charges were not made public, and the former president told reporters from his home on Thursday that he expected to be in jail by Friday.
Abdul Mannan Yusuf, a police spokesperson, told the AFP news agency that authorities would be "tactical" about when they would use the warrant.
"We can arrest him when we feel the need for it," he said.
Oscar Fernandez-Taranco, UN assistant secretary general for political affairs, who arrived with a delegation on Thursday night, said he was concerned about the security of the former president.
"It is extremely important that he be treated fully within the rule of law and that his rights, like those of all Maldivians, need to be protected and respected," said Fernandez-Taranco.
Clashes in Addu
Nasheed said on Friday that police and military were ransacking Addu atoll, a bastion of his supporters, and were dragging people out of their homes and beating those who belonged to his party, with rival party members helping to identify them.

"We are losing a country as we speak," he said, describing the attack as retaliation. Police said his supporters razed at least 20 government buildings on Wednesday night.
While Nasheed has repeatedly called for foreign support, no government has yet backed him.
The United States dealt him a blow on Thursday by announcing its recognition of the new regime as legitimate, but it backtracked on Friday.
"The circumstances of the transfer of power need to be clarified," said US State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland.
Regional power India has declined to intervene, calling it an "internal matter" and congratulating Waheed as the new head of state.
Video footage distributed by Nasheed's office emerged on Friday apparently showing him pleading with security forces in vain to help quell a police mutiny and violent demonstrations on the morning of his resignation.

Source:
Al Jazeera and agencies

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