Presidential Runoff in Maldives Commences Amidst India-China Power Struggle

Presidential Runoff in Maldives Commences Amidst India-China Power Struggle

The Maldives‌ started voting on Saturday to‍ decide their ‍next president, in an⁣ elections ​widely seen as ‍a referendum on whether to hitch ⁣their fortunes to ⁢China or ​India,⁤ both ⁢vying for influence in ‍the island nation.

Ibrahim Mohamed ‌Solih, 61, faces an ⁤uphill​ battle to ‌secure a second mandate after a⁢ term that saw renewed ⁣ties with New Delhi, the archipelago’s ‍traditional benefactor.

Frontrunner Mohamed Muizzu, 45, has⁣ vowed closer ties with ⁢Beijing and a ⁤review of relations with India​ if he ​is elected.

Muizzu⁢ won 46% of the ⁤first-round vote earlier this month, seven points clear of Solih, but the ⁤contest​ remains on a knife’s edge, with ⁤barely 15,000 ​votes between the pair.

Maldives​ election run-off pitched as fork in the road between India and‍ ChinaRead more

People ‌began lining up across the country, best known for its luxury​ beach resorts⁣ and celebrity tourists,‍ to cast their ​ballots before voting began at 8am.

“Queues formed long before polling opened,” said an ⁣election official, who⁣ requested anonymity⁣ because he was not authorised⁣ to ⁢speak to media. “The Elections Commission is encouraging people to vote early.”

Just over 282,000 people ‌are⁢ eligible to vote⁢ before polls close at ⁤5pm, with results expected late ‌Saturday or early⁣ Sunday.

Mohamed​ Muizzu, second right, during a campaign rally in the city of Addu. Photograph: Mohamed Afrah/AFP/Getty Images

The Maldives sits⁢ in a ⁢strategically vital position ‌in the‌ middle of the Indian Ocean, astride one of the world’s busiest east-west shipping lanes.

Muizzu’s party moved into ⁤Beijing’s orbit when last ‍in power and was an eager​ recipient‍ of financial largesse from China’s Belt and Road infrastructure​ program.

His mentor, former⁢ president Abdulla Yameen, borrowed heavily from China for⁣ construction projects and ⁣spurned India.

Solih was ⁢elected in 2018​ on the back ‍of discontent ‍with the increasingly⁣ autocratic rule by Yameen, who he accused⁤ of pushing the‍ country into a Chinese⁣ debt trap by​ borrowing heavily for infrastructure.

But⁣ his restoration ⁣of the Maldives’ traditional posture has itself proved controversial, with⁣ many‌ in ⁣the archipelago disapproving of India’s outsized political and economic clout.

If elected, ​Muizzu has vowed to free ‌his mentor Yameen, currently serving an 11-year sentence⁢ for⁢ corruption on the same prison island where​ he had​ jailed many of his ‌political opponents during​ his tenure.

2023-09-30 00:09:33
Article⁣ from www.theguardian.com
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