POLICE: DETAINED MALDIVES SUPREME COURT JUDGES TOOK BRIBES
Police: Detained Maldives supreme court judges took bribes |
Two supreme court justices who have
been arrested amid a deep political crisis in the Maldives took millions of
dollars in bribes in return for issuing a ruling ordering the release of
imprisoned politicians that sparked the crisis, the country’s acting police
chief said Wednesday.
Police have “proof of these
transactions” serving as evidence against Chief justice Abdulla Saeed and
Justice Ali Hameed, said Abdulla Nawaz, the acting police chief.
The two justices of the five-member
court were arrested on Tuesday along with former president Maumoon Abdul
Gayoom, who Nawaz accused of bribing lawmakers “to oust the government and also
creating dissent within armed forces, encouraging armed forces to rebel against
the government.”
Nawaz’s leveled the accusations
shortly after the U.N. human rights chief called the declaration of a state of
emergency declared for the Maldives by President Yameen Abdul Gayoom and its
suspension of constitutional guarantees an “all-out assault on democracy.”
Political turmoil has swept the
Maldives since a surprise court the ruling last week that ordered the release
of the jailed opposition leaders, including many Gayoom’s main political
rivals.
U.N. High Commissioner for Human
Rights Zeid Ra’ad al-Hussein said the restrictions imposed on Monday “create a
dangerous concentration of power in the hands of the president.”
The Maldives became a multiparty
democracy 10 years ago but lost much of those gains after Yameen was elected in
2013.
Zeid said in a statement issued
Wednesday by his office in Geneva that Yameen “has, to put it bluntly, usurped
the authority of the state’s rule-of-law institutions and its ability to work
independently from the executive.” What is happening now, he said, “is
tantamount to an all-out assault on democracy.”
Zeid’s criticism came a day after the
three Supreme Court justices who were not arrested annulled the earlier order
to free the imprisoned opposition politicians.
The annulment followed the state of
emergency, which gives officials sweeping powers to make arrests, search and
seize property and restrict freedom of assembly.
The U.N. and many foreign governments
including the United States, Britain and India have expressed concern over the
state of emergency and have urged Yameen to respect the earlier court order.
Hours after the emergency was
declared, security forces in riot gear stormed the Supreme Court building and
arrested the judges. Gayoom, who was president from 1978 to 2008, was arrested
the same day.
Nawaz also said police found “piles of
cash under the bed” of arrested judicial commission’s administrator Hassan
Saeed and said he is accused of “influencing the work of judges by distributing
bribes using money gained as bribes.”
Ex-president Mohamed Nasheed said
Wednesday on Twitter that Gayoom is not eating in custody and that Ali Hameed
has been “ill treated” without providing more details.
The government did not immediately
respond to the accusations of Nasheed, who is among the politicians named in
the original ruling freeing them. He lives in exile.
The Maldives is an archipelago of more
than 1,000 islands with fewer than 400,000 citizens, more than one-third of
them living in the crowded capital city, Male. Tourism now dominates the
economy, with wealthy foreigners flown to hyper-expensive resort islands.
But it remains, in many ways, a small
community. Gayoom, the former dictator, is the half brother of Yameen.
The two men are now political enemies.
Nasheed, now the opposition leader, unseated Gayoom in the country’s first
democratic elections in 2008. He and Gayoom are now political allies in an
opposition alliance.
The country’s main economic driver is
tourism and the foreign ministry on Wednesday invited representatives of
foreign governments and international groups to visit so they can assess the
situation and the Maldives level of safety and security.
Most tourists head to hyper-expensive
resort islands. The political turmoil has been limited to the capital of Male,
far from many tourist destinations and the statement stressed that no curfew
has been imposed.
Source: AP
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