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Yameen takes power in Maldives after vote turmoil

Update : 17 Nov 2013, 11:22 AM

Abdulla Yameen took power in the Maldives Sunday after a shock election victory, ending nearly two years of political turmoil that threatened to turn the honeymoon islands into an international pariah.

Yameen, the half-brother of the islands' long-time strongman ruler, was due to be sworn in at a presidential inauguration ceremony at around 1pm (0800 GMT).

The United States and regional superpower India were among the first to congratulate Yameen and said they looked forward to working closely with the new leader.

New Delhi had an uneasy relationship with Male after the toppling of former president Mohamed Nasheed who once took refuge at the Indian High Commission in Male to avoid arrest while the US led international concern over political instability.

In his first remarks after being declared the winner of a run-off contest early Sunday, Yameen said the country desperately needed stability and hoped his vanquished opponent, opposition leader Nasheed, would cooperate.

“The country needs stability,” Yameen, 54, told reporters in Male. “I hope we will receive the necessary cooperation from Nasheed through parliament.”

“Instead of confronting political leaders, we will confront the big challenges facing our country,” he said.

Nasheed conceded defeat after a bitterly fought battle and said he was pleased that the country finally had a democratically elected leader.

“The MDP (Maldives Democratic Party) has always asked for a government elected by the people,” Nasheed told reporters.

“Today is a happy day for the Maldives – we now have an elected government.”

India noted the reconciliatory tone of Nasheed.

“We welcome the acceptance of the verdict of the people of Maldives by all sides and commitment expressed to take the country forward on the path of stability, progress and development,” India's external affairs ministry said in a statement.

Outgoing president Mohamed Waheed, in an exclusive interview with AFP in Hong Kong, acknowledged the Indian Ocean archipelago was still trying to find its feet as a democracy but said it could now move on after the latest vote.

“We are going through an early stage of democratic transition. It's not easy for Maldives,” said Waheed, who has family in Hong Kong and will accompany his wife to Singapore where she has a medical appointment.

“Hopefully we are back on track. I believe now the Maldives is ready to move on,” he said. “It's a happy ending.”

The pro-Nasheed Minivan News noted that both men had pledged cooperation.

“Yameen's election brings to an end a chapter of controversy and uncertainty over the government's democratic legitimacy,” Minivan News said.

Nasheed has claimed he was toppled in a February 2012 coup triggered by a police mutiny and months of public protests orchestrated by Yameen's Progressive Party of Maldives (PPM) and his then vice president Waheed.

Nasheed has also accused Yameen's half-brother Maumoon Abdul Gayoom, who ruled the islands with an iron fist for 30 years, of being behind his downfall.

However, his conciliatory tone after the election will be a relief to the country's lifeblood tourist industry which had feared an already lengthy political crisis could further damage the image of a peaceful paradise.

After an annulled election result and two cancelled polls, foreign diplomats had increasingly come to view the delays as politically inspired.

Western diplomats had threatened international isolation unless the Maldives allowed its 350,000 Sunni Muslim population to freely elect a leader.

The European Union had warned of “appropriate measures” if Saturday's election did not go ahead as scheduled.

The Commonwealth on Thursday suspended the Maldives from its disciplinary panel, a first step towards expulsion from the 53-member organisation for failing to uphold its shared democratic values.

Nasheed, a former pro-democracy campaigner and climate change activist, saw his rivals unite to keep him out of power after his first round victory on November 9.

He became the first democratically-elected president in 2008 when he defeated Gayoom in a run-off.

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