Ex-prisoner wins Maldives election

Ex-prisoner wins Maldives election

A former political prisoner has unseated Asia's longest-serving leader to become the first democratically elected president of the Maldives, election officials say.

 
Mohamed Nasheed, the leader of the Maldivian Democratic party (MDP), beat incumbent Maumoon Abdul Gayoom, securing about 54 per cent of the votes, Mohamed Ibrahim, the election commissioner, said.
 
Gayoom, president since 1978, secured only 46 per cent of the votes in the keenly contested presidential run-off poll in which nearly 87 per cent of the nation's 209,000 registered voters cast their ballots.
 
After election officials confirmed Nasheed's victory on Wednesday, thousands of opposition supporters poured into the streets of the capital Male in celebration.
 
"I want a peaceful transition," Nasheed, a former political prisoner and outspoken critic of Gayoom, told reporters as results were still coming in.
 
"I want my supporters to be calm."
 
Gayoom later conceded defeat and congratulated Nasheed.
 
"Beloved citizens of the Maldives, I accept the results of the October 28 run-off election and respectfully congratulate Mohamed Nasheed and his party," Gayoom told the state-run Voice of Maldives radio. He said he would not leave the country.
 
In the first round of voting three weeks ago Gayoom, the leader of the ruling Dhivehi Rahyithunge party (DRP), took 40 per cent of the votes but failed to secure an outright victory.
 
Vote for change
 
Nasheed has promised to root out corruption, deliver better healthcare and communications to remote islands, cut state spending, privatize state trading enterprises and turn the lavish presidential palace into a university.
 
Many saw the vote as an opportunity to bring about change.
 
"Gayoom was the president when I was born," Sabra Noordeen, an opposition activist, said. "I'm keen to see a change so I went early and voted [Nasheed]."
 
Hussein Iqbal, a hotel employee, said he waited an hour to vote "for change".
 
Nasheed, who was once held for three years and described by Amnesty International as a "prisoner of conscience", had concentrated his campaign in Male, while Gayoom toured the country's outlying atolls in an attempt to secure support from conservative voters.
 
Historic poll
 
Ibrahim Shahib, a private sector employee, said he voted for Gayoom, who "may not be great, but still he is the better candidate".
 
Al Jazeera's Stephanie Scawen reported that the incumbent had been counting on support from women and the older electorate, but younger voters said they wanted change and would prefer anyone other than Gayoom in power.
 
Gayoom, Asia's longest-serving president, has been praised for helping bring major development to the small nation of 1,190 coral islands.
 
But while the nation has the highest per capita in South Asia, it faces a housing shortage, rising crime and drug abuse.
 
Gayoom, who is credited with holding the country's first ever multi-party presidential election, had been accused by the opposition of using corruption and strong-arm tactics to maintain his rule.
 
PHOTO CAPTION
 
Maldivian Democratic Party presidential candidate Mohamed 'Anni' Nasheed (C) shakes hands with supporters after an early morning prayer in Male on October 29, as he emerged winner of the presidential election.
 
Al-Jazeera

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