Rule of law appears to have been suspended in the Maldives as what opponents describe as the country’s “thuggish Petro Dictatorship” late Tuesday declared a 30-day state of emergency, under which citizens’ constitutional rights are revoked, media is restricted, and police forces are granted sweeping authority to arrest anyone they deem a threat to security.
The crackdown comes ahead of major opposition rally on Friday organized by the Maldivian Democratic Party (MDP), the party of former Maldives President Mohamed Nasheed. Nasheed was the nation’s first democratically elected president before he was ousted in 2012 and sentenced to 13 years in jail earlier this year on alleged terror charges.
The imposition of the state of emergency comes amid a deteriorating political situation, including the arrest of Vice President Ahmed Adeeb on Saturday for an alleged assassination attempt against President Abdulla Yameen. The Maldives Independent has a live blog of the unfolding situation.
The MDP issued a statement on Wednesday calling the state of emergency “a desperate attempt, by a President who is losing his grip, to cling onto power.” In addition to Nasheed, Yameen has jailed or threatened every opposition leader, and placed criminal charges on 1,700 others who participated in pro-democracy protests.
In an op-ed published Wednesday, Mark Lynas, former climate change advisor to Nasheed, argues there may be more at play than “the mere ambition of an autocratic regime to stifle dissent and opposition.”
In a little-reported development, the reigning government in late September submitted its climate action plan (pdf) to the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC).
Nasheed, known widely as a “climate hero,” had set the island nation on course to become the world’s first carbon-neutral nation. However, the Yameen administration has apparently scrapped these ambitions in favor of a plan that triples the country’s emissions by 2030 and imports huge amounts of oil for power generation. What’s more, Yameen has announced plans to drill for oil underneath the Maldives’ pristine coral reefs.