Você está na página 1de 2

October 30, 2012 6:11 pm

A Maldivian lesson for democrats


By Mohamed Nasheed

Most people know the Maldives for its luxurious honeymoon suites or How to spend it beach villas. But I write this article having spent a night in an altogether different class of accommodation: a Maldivian jail cell. I am no stranger to these institutions, having spent much of my adult life in incarceration, punishment for advocating democracy in my country, an Indian Ocean archipelago of 1,192 islands. Most recently I was jailed in 2006 when the Maldives was ruled by the dictator Maumoon Gayoom. I faced terrorism charges for giving a speech against corruption, which the regime claimed terrorised listeners. After 28 years in power, Mr Gayoom had finally consented to hold a multi-party presidential election and I feared I would be barred from standing. Under pressure from street demonstrations and international protest the regime relented, and I became my countrys first elected president in 2008. Today things have turned full circle. Once again, I have been jailed. Once again, an authoritarian regime,effectively controlled by the old dictator, is pressing politically motivated charges against me. Once again, I may be prevented from competing in a presidential election, which must be held by the end of next year. The Maldives, a youthful, Muslim country whose people rose up and shook off decades of authoritarian rule, provides an important lesson for democrats in Egypt, Tunisia, Libya and other countries caught in the Arab uprisings. Even after the revolution, the old guard can linger on and suffocate fledgling democracy. Following the 2008 elections, things began to improve in the Maldives. My administration freed all political prisoners. With support from the International Monetary Fund, we managed to reduce the budget deficit from 22 per cent of gross domestic product in 2009 to 9 per cent by the end of last year. We put in place a social safety net, including a state pension, support for the disabled and universal health insurance. We were unable, however, to dismantle adequately the remnants of the Gayoom autocracy. His cronies continued to hold powerful positions in the judiciary, the parliament and the security forces. In February this year, the former dictators allies, along with Islamic extremists and my vicepresident, toppled me from power. Following a police and army mutiny, I was, in my opinion, presented with a stark ultimatum: resign within the hour or face bloodshed. I chose the former. Since then, my country famously vulnerable to climate change because of its proximity to the sea has metaphorically, as well as physically, been slipping into the abyss.

The police and military have received large pay rises, while coup financiers have been assured that planned new taxes will be shelved. The countrys biggest foreign investor, GMR, which is spending $500m revamping the international airport, has been hounded by a government of businessmen keen to get their hands on the contract. The economy is in free fall, with the budget deficit approaching 30 per cent of GDP. Meanwhile, hundreds of pro-democracy supporters have been beaten, detained and, in some cases, tortured in what Amnesty International describes as a human rights crisis. On Sunday I will face an extraordinary court, established especially to hear my case. I am to be tried for abuse of power, in particular for the arrest of a corrupt judge, who was an ally of Mr Gayoom. My conviction is a foregone conclusion. Mohamed Waheed, my former vice-president, may decide to pardon me, but only in a way that ensures I remain barred from seeking office next year. The Maldivian people are seeing their economy collapse and their election stolen from them. If the world is watching, it is seeing a young Muslim democracy fail. I hope the international community pressures the Waheed regime to make good on its promises: to bring human rights abusers in the security forces to book; to cease the harassment of peaceful political activists; and to allow internationally monitored elections in which all candidates are allowed to stand. Whether I win or lose is irrelevant. What is important is that a genuine election is held, and the will of the Maldivian people not the militarys force of arms is the final adjudicator of my nations future. The writer is former president of the Maldives
Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2012. You may share using our article tools. Please don't cut articles from FT.com and redistribute by email or post to the web.

Você também pode gostar