Maldives election commission confirms opposition victory

Maldives election commission confirms opposition victory
Maldives' president-elect Ibrahim Mohamed Solih (C) participates in celebrations after winning the presidential elections in Male on September 29, 2018. (AFP / Ahmed SHURAU)
Updated 29 September 2018
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Maldives election commission confirms opposition victory

Maldives election commission confirms opposition victory
  • Election results showed that Solih received 58.4 percent of the votes cast in the Sept. 23 election against current president Yameen Abdul Gayoom's 41.6 percent
  • Solih was a democracy activist and former parliamentary majority leader during decades of autocratic rule in the Indian Ocean archipelago nation

COLOMBO, Sri Lanka: The Maldives’ election commission on Saturday released the final results of this month’s presidential election, confirming the surprising opposition victory by longtime lawmaker Ibrahim Mohamed Solih.
The results showed that Solih received 58.4 percent of the votes cast in the Sept. 23 election while his opponent and the current president, Yameen Abdul Gayoom, got 41.6 percent, according to the commission’s spokesman, Ahmed Akram.
The commission had already released provisional results. According to the election law, it must release the official results within seven days of the election.
The election outcome surprised many, given opposition warnings that the voting could be rigged by Yameen.
Since getting elected in 2013, Yameen had cracked down on political dissent, jailing rivals — including his half brother and the Maldives’ first democratically elected president — and Supreme Court justices following allegedly flawed trials, while forcing some into exile. He also consolidated power by exerting control over the courts, bureaucracy, the police and the military.
Solih, 56, was a democracy activist during decades of autocratic rule in the Indian Ocean archipelago nation and a former parliamentary majority leader. He became the Maldivian Democratic Party’s presidential candidate after its other top figures were jailed or exiled by Yameen’s government.
Party leader and former President Mohamed Nasheed, in exile in Sri Lanka, had hoped to run again but was disqualified because of an outstanding prison sentence in the Maldives.
India and China, jostling for greater influence in the Indian Ocean region, had been watching the election closely.
The European Union didn’t send election observers because the Maldives failed to meet conditions for monitoring, and few foreign media were allowed into the country to cover the vote. The US, which earlier threatened sanctions if the elections were not free and fair, urged calm while the election results were being finalized.
The Maldives became a multiparty democracy in 2008 after decades of autocratic rule. However, under Yameen’s rule, the country lost many of its democratic gains.