“Super Majority For Pro-China President Mohamed Muizzu’s Alliance In The Maldives

Bad News For India

Update: 2024-04-23 03:46 GMT

It’s bad news for India from the Maldives. Maldivian voters gave the pro-China President Mohamed Muizzu’s alliance a “supermajority” in the Parliamentary elections held on April 21.

The President can now pursue his pro-China policy untrammelled by a Parliament dominated by the pro-India Maldivian Democratic Party (MDP).

As per the interim results, the Muizzu-led Progress Party of Maldives People's National Congress (PPM/PNC) alliance has won 70 seats in the Maldivian Parliament comprising 93 seats.

With three-fourths of the entire Parliament in his hands, the President gets the power to amend the Constitution. He can also chalk out and implement policies without being hamstrung by a hostile Parliament.

The other parties in the coalition such as the Maldives National Party (MNP) and Maldives Development Alliance (MDA) also won seats with the MNP winning one and the MDA winning two.

The Maldivian Democratic Party (MDP), led by former President Ibrahim Solih, which had won 65 seats in the previous Parliament, won only 15 seats this time. And the Democrats, led by former President and Speaker Mohamed Nasheed and the Adhaalath Party, failed to win any seat.

The People's National Front (PNF) floated by former President Abdulla Yameen also drew a blank, though it had contested 35 seats.

President Muizzu was elected a President in October 2023 and assumed charge in November. But he was hamstrung by the fact that the Majlis or Parliament was in the hands of the opposition Maldivian Democratic Party (MDP) led by former President Ibrahim Solih. It was difficult for him to pass money bills.

He was subjected to heavy flak by the pro-India MDP on his anti-India and pro-China policy. At the same time, he received flak from former President Yameen who wanted him to implement the “India Out” policy fully and not in bits and pieces.

Yameen has indicated that he will continue to press Muizzu to go ahead with the India Out project, The Maldives Republic website reported.

The former President told the press after release from prison that he would continue his “India Out” campaign. While the Maldivian government has taken steps towards reducing the Indian military footprint, confirming the return of personnel associated with operating military helicopters and a Dornier aircraft, Yameen cast doubt on the transparency and completeness of these efforts.

He points out that although the personnel have been replaced, the aircraft are still operational under Indian civilians’ control. Yameen’s tenure as president from 2013 to 2018 was marked by strained relations with India, stemming partly from his administration’s request for the withdrawal of Indian troops—a request that went unheeded.

This historical tension sets the backdrop for his current criticisms of the existing administration’s handling of foreign military presence, which he and others in the opposition deem unconstitutional.

By revitalising the “India Out” campaign, Yameen not only challenges the current government’s policies but also positions himself as a defender of Maldivian sovereignty against perceived external encroachments. This move could potentially intensify domestic political contention and complicate Maldives’ foreign relations, especially with India, the Maldives Republic said.

There was much confusion in the politics of the Maldives in the run up to the April 21 polls. All parties in the fray had either split or were faction-ridden. There were no towering leaders who could set appealing agendas and inspire voters to support them. There were no overriding issues firing the imagination of the people and stirring political action. Muizzu was seen as a confused man and Solih as ineffective. Yameen was in jail on corruption charges. Nasheed was abroad in an international climate change organisation.

Observers said that there was ennui among the voters, a palpable sense of fatigue, as successive governments had failed to give the people a stable, well-thought-out and realistic policies.

President Muizzu who had won convincingly on a platform promising to throw off the yoke of Indian domination and look to China instead, was unable to translate his ideas into action.

After making stinging statements against India, Muizzu had to eat his words, seek Indian economic cooperation and woo Indian tourists, who were boycotting Maldives because of his pro-China tilt and his vituperative comments on India.

No doubt, Maldivians did not like the Indian military presence (or for that matter any foreign military presence) in their midst. They supported Muizzu’s call for the removal of the Indian military. But they also did not approve of his call for the wholesale alienation of India and casting the lot entirely with China. The Maldivians have close historical and people-to-people ties with India, a kind of relationship they do not have with China, though they admire the Chinese work ethic.

Muizzu’s party, the Peoples’ National Congress (PNC) is a breakaway group of the Progressive Party of the Maldives (PPM) headed by former President Abdulla Yameen. Nevertheless, the PNC and PPM formed an alliance to fight the October 2023 Presidential and the Parliamentary elections.

However, after Muizzu won the Presidential election, the PPM leader Abdulla Yameen split with Muizzu and formed his own party called Peoples’ National Front (PNF).

Within his own PNC, Muizzu formed his own clique. He put up candidates against the official PNC candidates in the Parliamentary elections! These were identified as “government candidates”. The “government candidates” hoped to get votes on the grounds that they were the “President’s chosen men.”

The Maldivian Democratic Party (MDP) also underwent a split, with one group being under former President Ibrahim Solih and the other led by former Parliament Speaker and former President Mohamed Nasheed. Nasheed formed his own party called the “Democrats.”

Nasheed’s grievance against Solih was that the latter did not carry out the promises he had made to him to change the Presidential system to a Parliamentary system and go after the Islamic radicals. There was even a rumour that Solih did not do enough to punish the Islamic radicals who tried to assassinate Nasheed.

Since all parties were split, no party had a decisive advantage over others. A hung Parliament was on the cards.

Though Muizzu began his innings as President as an anti-India leader, calling for the removal of Indian troops manning a medical air evacuation service with Indian aircraft, he finally agreed to the Indian suggestion that Indian civilians would man the service.

After some of his ministers made nasty remarks against Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, and Indian tourists boycotted the Maldives, Muizzu climbed down and said that he would hold road shows in India to attract Indian tourists.

Muizzu also asked India to continue its development projects in the Maldives, though earlier he said he would review all the “hundred” agreements with India. The only decisive step he took was the cancellation of an agreement to conduct a hydrographic survey.

India responded favourably, setting apart INR 770 crores (US$ 92 million) for the Maldives in the 2024-25 budget. On April 5, India allowed the export of certain quantities of essential commodities for the year 2024-25 at the request of the Maldives government.

The Indian government announced that these items could be exported from the designated ports of Mundra, Tuticorin, Nhava Sheva and the Inland Container Depot at Tughlakabad.

China too is executing massive infrastructure projects in the Maldives costing millions of dollars. Muizzu avoided visiting India and visited China instead. He signed 20 MoUs there, including one on “strategic partnership” for a limited period, raising concerns in India.

Meanwhile, in a report dated October 2023, the World Bank had warned that further cosying up to China could spell trouble for the Maldives since the US$ 1.37 billion it already owed to Beijing represented 20% of its total public debt.

China is the Maldives’ biggest bilateral creditor, ahead of Saudi Arabia and India, to which it owes US $ 124m and US$ 123m, respectively, the Bank said.

Therefore, the Sino-Indian competition for the hand of the Maldivians is on in full earnest and is expected to continue. However, much depends on how President Muizzu handles the two countries.

Now that he has full control of Parliament, he will have the elbow room to take decisions and implement them in the way he wants.

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