Current:Home > InvestMaldives presidential runoff is set for Sept. 30 with pro-China opposition in a surprise lead -FundTrack
Maldives presidential runoff is set for Sept. 30 with pro-China opposition in a surprise lead
View
Date:2025-04-14 13:26:38
COLOMBO, Sri Lanka (AP) — Maldivians will return to the polls on Sept. 30 to vote in a runoff election between the top two candidates in the country’s presidential race after neither secured more than 50% in the first round, the elections commission said Sunday.
Main opposition candidate Mohamed Muiz managed a surprise lead with more than 46% of votes, while the incumbent President Ibrahim Mohamed Solih, who was seen as the favorite, got only 39%.
The election on Saturday has shaped up as a virtual referendum over which regional power — India or China — will have the biggest influence in the Indian Ocean archipelago state. Solih is perceived as pro-India while Muiz is seen as pro-China.
The result is seen a remarkable achievement for Muiz, who was a late selection as a candidate by his party after its leader, former President Abdullah Yameen, was blocked from running by the Supreme Court. He is serving a prison term for corruption and money laundering.
“People did not see this government to be working for them, you have a government that was talking about ‘India first,’” said Mohamed Shareef, a top official from Muiz’s party.
Azim Zahir, a political science and international relations lecturer at the University of Western Australia, said the first-round election outcome was “a major blow” to Solih and “one could read it even as a rejection of his government,”
Muiz had only three weeks to campaign and did not have the advantage of a sitting president, Zahir said. He said Muiz’s strong stand against the presence of Indian troops in the Maldives could have been a significant factor in the election.
He said the result also showed a nation divided according to the rival parties’ ideologies between the pro-Western, pro-human rights Maldivian Democratic Party and Muiz’s People’s National Congress, which has a more religiously conservative leaning and views Western values with suspicion.
Solih has been battling allegations by Muiz that he had allowed India an unchecked presence in the country.
Muiz promised that if he wins, he will remove Indian troops stationed in the Maldives and balance the country’s trade relations, which he said are heavily in India’s favor. He however has promised to continue friendly and balanced relations with the Maldives’ closest neighbor.
Muiz’s PNC party is viewed as heavily pro-China. When its leader Abdullah Yameen was president from 2013-2018, he made the Maldives a part of China’s Belt and Road initiative. It envisages building ports, railways and roads to expand trade — and China’s influence — across Asia, Africa and Europe.
Shareef said that the removal of Indian military personnel was a “non-negotiable” position for the party. He said the number of Indian troops and their activities are hidden from Maldivians and that they have near-exclusive use of certain ports and airports in the country.
Both India and China are vying for influence in the small state made up of some 1,200 coral islands in the Indian Ocean. It lies on the main shipping route between the East and the West.
Muiz seems to have taken advantage of a split in Solih’s MDP that led Mohamed Nasheed, a charismatic former president, to break away and field his own candidate. Nasheed’s candidate, Ilyas Labeeb, secured 7% of the vote.
More than 282,000 people were eligible to vote in the election and turnout was nearly 80%.
veryGood! (62)
Related
- Residents worried after ceiling cracks appear following reroofing works at Jalan Tenaga HDB blocks
- Why Idina Menzel Says Playing Lea Michele’s Mom on Glee “Wasn’t Great” for Her Ego
- Ivy League football coaches praise conference’s stability (and wish they weren’t so alone)
- Chicago mayor to introduce the police department’s counterterrorism head as new superintendent
- Charges tied to China weigh on GM in Q4, but profit and revenue top expectations
- Cuba's first Little League World Series team has family ties to MLB's Gurriel brothers
- Judge sides with young activists in first-of-its-kind climate change trial in Montana
- Freed U.S. nurse says Christian song was her rallying cry after she was kidnapped in Haiti
- 2 killed, 3 injured in shooting at makeshift club in Houston
- Lucas Glover tops Patrick Cantlay to win FedEx St. Jude Championship on first playoff hole
Ranking
- DeepSeek: Did a little known Chinese startup cause a 'Sputnik moment' for AI?
- Rebel Wilson's Baby Girl Royce Is Cuteness Overload in New Photo
- This Zillow Gone Wild church-turned-mansion breathes new life into former gathering space
- 'Last Voyage of the Demeter': Biggest changes from the Dracula book to movie (Spoilers!)
- All That You Wanted to Know About She’s All That
- Get Head-to-Toe Hydration With a $59 Deal on $132 Worth of Josie Maran Products
- EXPLAINER: Why is a police raid on a newspaper in Kansas so unusual?
- Why Idina Menzel Says Playing Lea Michele’s Mom on Glee “Wasn’t Great” for Her Ego
Recommendation
Off the Grid: Sally breaks down USA TODAY's daily crossword puzzle, Triathlon
Northwestern sued again over troubled athletics program. This time it’s the baseball program
Do not use: FDA recalls some tests for pregnancy, ovulation and urinary tract infections
Judge sides with young activists in first-of-its-kind climate change trial in Montana
Intel's stock did something it hasn't done since 2022
Ranking SEC quarterbacks in 2023, from Jayden Daniels and Joe Milton to Graham Mertz
Nightengale's Notebook: Dodgers running away in NL West with Dave Roberts' 'favorite team'
Victim vignettes: Hawaii wildfires lead to indescribable grief as families learn fate of loved ones