Maldives Parliament shut down to stop Speaker's removal | Daily News

Maldives Parliament shut down to stop Speaker's removal

 

The Maldivian army has locked down the country's parliament after the opposition vowed to move ahead with a vote against a key ally of President Abdulla Yameen.

Defiant lawmakers, however, scaled metre-high walls to the parliament compound on Monday, after fighting off riot police and pepper spray.

A no-confidence motion against Speaker Abdulla Maseeh was scheduled to take place on Monday before the lockdown was forced into effect by the military.

The opposition, which secured enough support from government defectors to begin impeachment proceedings against Maseeh earlier this month, accuse him of ignoring allegations of corruption, mismanagement and rights abuses.

However, the ruling party dismissed the motion after Yameen, who denies opposition allegations of corruption and authoritarian reversals, announced that four of the defectors had lost their parliamentary seats.

Ahmed Mahloof, an opposition lawmaker, said soldiers carrying batons followed the MPs inside the parliament house and forcibly ejected them.

"Soldiers in riot gear are dragging elected members out from the parliament," Mahloof told Al Jazeera.

"This is clearly unconstitutional. Many of us have been injured."

Videos posted on social media show soldiers pushing lawmakers out of the building. A few politicians appear to have been injured.

"There is no better symbol of Yameen's dictatorship than the image of his security forces barring elected MPs from parliament. This president has lost all legitimacy and credibility," said Eva Abdulla, an opposition lawmaker from the Maldivian Democratic Party.

The army could not be reached for comment.

Yameen has arrested or forced into exile most of the opponents who might have challenged him in next year's presidential elections.

Last year, an Al Jazeera investigation revealed how Yameen's government embezzled millions of dollars in tourism revenue.

The embattled president now faces a coalition of four opposition parties, led by his brother Maumoon Abdul Gayoom, who ruled the Maldives with an iron fist for 30 years, and Mohamed Nasheed, the country's first democratically elected president.

Faris Maumoon, Yameen's nephew and the leader of the effort to impeach the speaker, was arrested on charges of bribery last week.

Two other lawmakers were put on trial on charges of bribery and terrorism.


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