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Special Report
Democratic hiccups in Malé
By : Aishath
velezinee
A referendum win of the presidential
over the parliamentary system of government in the Maldives
is being seen by President Gayoom as a personal success. But
he may not be around long to taste the fruits of this contested
victory.
On 18 August, Maldivians over
the age of 18, amounting to a voter population of 194,000,
went to the polls in a public referendum to decide on the
future system of the country’s government. With re-polling
due to irregularities in two districts in Addu Atoll three
days later, a preliminary count at deadline stood at 93,581
for the presidential system to 57,158 for the parliamentary
system.
The ballot box where President
Maumoon Abdul Gayoom cast his vote, T14, had 52 percent in
favour of a parliamentary system. But of 29 ballot boxes in
Malé, where the most vocal opposition to President
Gayoom exists, 18 ballot boxes were reported to be weighted
towards a presidential system. Addu Atoll, the second-largest
urban centre in the Maldives and a stronghold of the opposition
Maldivian Democratic Party (MDP), was also reported to favour
a presidential system. To say the least, this was a result
that has confounded many.
Despite the unrest feared
by some, voting went smoothly. Nonetheless, in the aftermath,
certain complaints remain unaddressed. MDP members report
that they lodged 147 complaints, ranging from multiple casting
of votes, to party representatives being prevented from observing
the counting of ballots. There were also issues regarding
the placement of ballot boxes. President Gayoom’s own
Dhivehi Rayyithunge Party (DRP) itself lodged 127 complaints,
accusing MDP supporters of surrounding polling booths and
threatening voters. As Himal went to press, neither the Election
Commissioner nor the 11-member Committee of the Constitutional
Assembly overseeing the referendum had responded to the complaints
on either side. The Human Rights Commission of the Maldives,
the only local organisation to independently observe the referendum,
had also yet to issue a report. In the meantime, conspiracy
theories galore float around the islands.
What next?
Besides the uncertainty about the results of the referendum,
there also exists abundant confusion about the current system
of government itself. This was an issue much discussed in
the election campaign, with supporters of the presidential
system arguing that what exists now is more akin to a parliamentary
system than a presidential system. On the other hand, those
in favour of a parliamentary system argue that what is in
place today, and which has permitted President Gayoom’s
autocratic rule for almost three decades, represents a presidential
system. In fact, what exists today may be an exclusive ‘Gayoomist’
system that is neither presidential nor parliamentary, where
all powers belong to him and him alone, as does much of the
country’s history, culture, language nationalism and
national identity.
The Maldives has had many democratic
hiccups over the last thirty years. In 1990, as the Maldives
celebrated 25 years of independence, President Gayoom declared
the Maldives the archetype of a democracy, exemplary to the
rest of the “so-called” democratic countries.
Years later, with mounting opposition within and pressure
from the international community growing, the president declared
that the Constitution that he had reformed after 17 years
of deliberation was in fact inhibiting democratic rule. Thus
there began a second attempt at constitutional reform, this
time to introduce a “modern democracy” with a
“perfect presidential system”.
A presidential system under
a new constitution would take away the president’s embedded
power base in Parliament, in that the cabinet would be appointed
from outside parliament. But government accountability would
also weaken, as cabinet ministers would not be made answerable
to the Parliament, but only to a parliamentary committee whose
workings would remain outside public scrutiny.
The campaign
Although the decision to hold a public referendum on the future
system of government had been taken by the Constitutional
Assembly as early as August 2006, there had been no attempt
to educate the public on the two systems of government. A
month before the referendum date, there began an earnest campaign
by political parties to garner support for their system of
choice. A multi-party coalition, which included all registered
as well as waiting-to-register political parties, joined President
Gayoom to campaign for a presidential system. In the meantime,
the MDP, which has consistently opposed Gayoom’s autocracy,
stood alone in favour of a parliamentary system.
The active and unequivocal
support of the other political parties in promoting a presidential
system soon made the referendum a virtual standoff between
the MDP and what became a Gayoom-led coalition. Covertly capitalising
on this turn of events, state media allocated equal airtime
on both radio and television to political parties to promote
a system of government. This effectively ensured the presidential
system around 80 percent of the total airtime.
In the politically charged,
emotion-driven campaign, suppor-ters used whatever influence
they could to sway the public to their preferred system –
meaning the system that they saw as most likely to bring them
to power. For instance, the Socialist Democratic Party –
formed by former MDP president Ibrahim Ismail, and currently
awaiting registration – sought to explain why it had
shifted from the arliamentary to the presidential position.
The Maldives had changed since political parties were first
permitted to form in 2005, it held, thus making a presidential
system more suitable in the current context. The political-Islamist
Adaalath Party declared a presidential system to be the “most
Islam-friendly” system of government. President Gayoom
himself travelled the islands promising ports and harbours,
schools and hospitals – and all else that he had failed
to provide in his thirty years in power – if the people
voted for a presidential system. By the last week of campaigning,
the president was using his office to campaign for a presidential
system, issuing a flurry of statements belabouring the point
that the president – and thus, by inference, the government
– favoured a presidential system.
For its part, the MDP continued
to insist that the referendum was less about a future system
of government, and more a referendum on President Gayoom himself.
But the DRP vehemently denied any ulterior motive, or that
the vote had any link to the president. Of course, this rhetoric
lasted only until the results were announced.
More Gayoomism?
Within hours of the referendum, President Gayoom was claiming
leadership to be a divine right, maintaining that the referendum
results were yet another endorsement of his popularity. Meeting
the press in his official office, the president declared victory
for himself, saying, “I’m very happy that the
Maldivian people have given me a massive vote of confidence.
It is a clear mandate to go ahead with the reform programme.”
Indeed, the people of the Maldives
may now appear increasingly unable to shake off the Gayoomist
web. Yet if the referendum was in fact a vote for Gayoom,
the results show his popularity has waned drastically –
63 percent support, as opposed to the more than 95 percent
majority that he has claimed in six uncontested referendums
of the past. Further, all of the other minority parties and
parties-to-be that supported the president all have a share
in that 63 percent – a share they would surely claim
in the next elections.
In the days immediately before
and after the referendum, President Gayoom’s hold was
further shaken with the resignation of his three most prized
cabinet ministers – Foreign Minister Ahmed Shaheed,
Attorney General Hassan Saeed, and Justice Minister Mohamed
Jameel Ahmed. These were the young and vibrant reformists
who pulled Gayoom through the quagmires in recent years, as
the opposition made increasingly vociferous demands for change.
Come 2008 and the scheduled elections, Gayoom’s future
in the Presidential Palace – which he built and has
occupied these many decades – is not at all certain. |