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Maldives ex-leader vows fightback after vote chaos

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AFP Colombo
Exiled Maldives opposition leader Mohamed Nasheed vowed today to keep up the pressure on the government after it deployed troops to remove his MPs from parliament, drawing a warning from Washington.

Nasheed admitted he had been unable to secure "outright victory" in his bid to seize control of parliament by entering into a pact with the president's half-brother, former strongman president Maumoon Abdul Gayoom.

A vote of no confidence in the house speaker, intended to destabilise President Abdulla Yameen ahead of elections next year, ended in defeat when soldiers took away 13 opposition MPs and the rest walked out in protest.
 

The scenes, which were captured on camera and circulated on social media, prompted the US embassy to urge Male to "restore faith in democratic processes".

But Nasheed, who has pledged to return to the honeymoon islands to contest the 2018 election, said Monday's incident had exposed the government's shaky majority and strengthened his resolve to try again.

"I am not disappointed," Nasheed told AFP in Colombo from where he coordinated the abortive parliamentary push.

"I don't think there was a failure, but we did not come out with an outright victory."

Nasheed accused the government of using intimidation to prevent its MPs from defecting to the opposition side.

"The end game is to ensure free and fair elections," Nasheed said.

"I want to be able to go back and contest elections. I will contest elections."

Nasheed became the Maldives' first democratically elected president in 2008, but was narrowly defeated by Yameen in a controversial 2013 election run-off.

He now lives in exile in London after he was convicted in 2015 on terrorism charges that were widely seen as politically motivated.

Yameen has presided over a major crackdown on political dissent in the nation of 340,000 that has raised fears over its stability and dented its image as an island tourism paradise.

Almost all key opposition leaders and a number of ruling party dissidents have either been jailed or fled into exile since he took office.

That has led to an estrangement from Gayoom, his half-brother, who himself ruled the country for three decades before he was ousted in 2008.

Gayoom agreed over the weekend to work with the opposition to free those convicted of politically motivated charges.

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First Published: Mar 29 2017 | 4:57 PM IST

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