Maldives: Oppn set to move impeachment motion against Prez
The development comes a day after clashes broke out in Parliament on Sunday between pro-government MPs and opposition lawmakers over differences over the approval of four members of the pro-China President's cabinet.
PTI
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Mohamed Muizzu defeated India-friendly incumbent Ibrahim Mohamed Solih in the presidential runoff held in September last year. PHOTO: PTI
Male, 29 Jan
The main Opposition MDP, which holds a majority in the Maldivian Parliament, is planning to submit a motion to impeach President Mohamed Muizzu even as three members of his cabinet were denied approval during a parliamentary vote on Monday, according to media reports here.
The development comes a day after clashes broke out in Parliament on
Sunday between pro-government MPs and opposition lawmakers over differences
over the approval of four members of the pro-China President's cabinet.
Muizzu, 45, defeated India-friendly incumbent Ibrahim Mohamed Solih in
the presidential runoff held in September last year. “The MDP, in partnership
with the Democrats, have gathered enough signatures for an impeachment motion.
However, they have yet to submit it,” Sun.com reported, quoting a lawmaker from
the MDP.
The decision to submit an impeachment motion was taken unanimously in
the parliamentary group meeting of the MDP held on Monday, The Edition.mv
reported. “The Constitution, along with the Parliament’s standing orders,
dictates that the president can be impeached with 56 votes,” the Sun.com added.
The Parliament had recently amended its standing orders to make it
easier to submit an impeachment motion. The Maldivian Parliament has a total of
80 members. The Maldivian Democratic Party (MDP) has 45, followed by its ally
The Democrats (DEM) with 13 members. Of the ruling coalition of PPM-PNC, the
Progressive Party of the Maldives has 2 while the People’s National Congress
has 13 members. There are three independents while the Jumhooree Party and the
Maldives Development Alliance (MDA) have two each.
The gathering of signatures for an impeachment motion against the
President comes a day after the PPM-PNC coalition, submitted no-confidence
motions against Speaker Mohamed Aslam and Deputy Speaker Ahmed Saleem – both
from MDP.
Earlier in the day, Parliament voted to deny approval to Housing
Minister Ali Haidar Ahmed, Islamic Minister Mohamed Shaheem Ali Saeed, and
Attorney General Ahmed Usham, while Economic Minister Mohamed Saeed narrowly
survived the same fate himself, Sun.com reported.
After the Maldivian Democratic Party (MDP) and The Democrats’
parliamentary group decided to withhold parliamentary approval for four members
of President Muizzu’s cabinet ahead of the voting on Sunday, the pro-government
MPs from the ruling party Progressive Party of Maldives and People’s National
Congress (PPM/PNC) coalition initiated a protest, obstructing the parliamentary
sitting. Two MPs were injured during a brawl.
On 20 November last year President Muizzu made a formal request for the
approval of his cabinet, two days after his administration took office. The
Parliament had been scheduled to vote on the cabinet on December 18, but the
original report by the Government Oversight Committee was rejected. The
Parliament held an extraordinary sitting on Sunday to take the vote on the
committee’s new report, which was passed on December 30, Sun.com reported. But
just ahead of the vote, the main opposition MDP, the largest party in the
house, issued a three-line red whip to deny approval to the four cabinet
members.
Soon after taking oath as the President of Maldives on 17 November,
Muizzu formally requested India to withdraw 88 military personnel from his
country by 15 March, saying the Maldivian people have given him a "strong
mandate" to make this request to New Delhi.
Earlier on 24 January, calling India the “most long-standing ally,” the
MDP and the Democrats had expressed concern about the Muizzu government’s
“anti-India stance.” The open support (for India) by the two parties had come a
day after the Maldives government said a Chinese ship, equipped to carry
research and surveys, would be docking at a Maldivian port after being
permitted to make a port call for replenishment.
The permission to allow the Chinese ship had come amid strained ties
between India and Maldives after President Muizzu made Beijing his first port
of call early this month soon after assuming office. Traditionally, New Delhi
has been the first port of call for a Maldivian President.
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