The first round of the Maldives
presidential elections – the second multi-party presidential elections
held in the country since 2008 – came to a bitter end after the Supreme
Court annulled the poll
deeming it invalid, void from the outset and, as per the exact wordings
of Justice Ahmed Abdulla Didi, “undermining the principle of Universal
Suffrage”.
This article is based on direct
observations of the proceedings of the Supreme Court case filed by the
Jumhooree Party (JP) against the Elections Commission (EC), in which the
presidential election was annulled.
After succumbing to a disappointing third
place finish at the poll despite a heavily financed presidential
campaign, JP Leader Gasim Ibrahim and his party sought to annul the poll,
citing “massive” electoral fraud amounting to a “systematic failure”,
that would have otherwise put him at the forefront of the race to become
the sixth president of the country.
Among the list of allegations upon which
the party founded its case were the presence of deceased and underaged
voters, and repeated or erroneous entries. This, they argued, paved way
for their opponents, primarily the Maldivian Democratic Party (MDP) to
cast ineligible votes that impacted the “true outcome” of the poll.
To add weight to their claims, the party
produced lists of entries in the voter registry which it claimed to be
invalid – the source of which remains subject to doubt, with the party’s
claims to have obtained the information through its private
investigations, party call-centres, and hearsay statements from
anonymous witnesses.
Following the submission of the evidence
and inspection of the original voting list used by Elections Commission
(EC) officials, the Supreme Court tasked a ‘Technical Team’ of police
officers to compare the voter list against the allegations by the JP.
The Supreme Court, using the findings of
the police’s ‘technical team of experts’ – who claimed the existence of
some 5,623 instances of electoral fraud – annulled the elections in a
four to three decision, contending that instances of electoral fraud
highlighted by the police sufficed to prove a loss of legitimacy in the
election.
The majority ruling was formed by Supreme
Court Justices Adam Mohamed, Dr Ahmed Abdulla Didi, Ali Hameed and
Abdulla Saeed. Meanwhile, the Chief Justice Ahmed Faiz Hussain, Justices
Abdulla Areef and Muthasim Adnan had dissenting views in which they
argued that there lacked sufficient grounds to annul the poll.
Controversy surrounding Justices
It is first worth highlighting the controversies that surround the four Justices who formed the majority ruling.
- Justice Ali Hameed
– who was formerly a High Court Judge prior to his appointment to the
Supreme Court – is currently under both police and Judicial Service Commission (JSC) investigation for the sex scandal in which leaked CCTV footage
allegedly taken during a stay in Sri Lanka depicted him fornicating
with multiple European and Sri Lankan prostitutes. The videos went viral
in both local media and on social networks, subjecting the judge to
heavy public criticism. Meanwhile. a corruption case against Justice Hameed was forwarded to the prosecutor general on July 2013 for abuse of state funds.
- Justice Dr Ahmed
Abdulla Didi was formerly a member of the Dhivehi Qaumee Party (DQP) –
whose leader Dr Hassan Saeed represented the Jumhoree Party (JP) in the
case. Didi contested the 2009 parliamentary elections as a DQP candidate. Moreover, Justice Didi’s eligibility had been contested after it had been argued
that he did not satisfy the requirements as prescribed by the law to
sit in the Supreme Court, as he lacked the required seven years
experience practicing law.
- Justice Adam
Mohamed – who is also the Chair of the judicial watchdog the Judicial
Service Commission (JSC) – stands accused by fellow commission member
Shuaib Abdul Rahman of dictatorial conduct in the commission including
an instance where he, as the chair of the JSC, outright refused to table a no-confidence motion
levied against himself. He has also been subjected to criticism for the
JSC’s delay in looking into Justice Ali Hameed’s sex-tape scandal and
the controversial suspension of the Chief Judge of High Court over one year ago.
- Justice Abdulla Saeed – who was the interim Chief Justice prior to mid 2010 – stands accused of making politicised statements, contrary to the law. Recently, opposition-aligned Raajje TV – which was destroyed in an arson attack this week – aired an alleged audio clip in which Justice Saeed described the opposition MDP candidate Mohamed Nasheed and his supporters as suffering from “yellow fever”, and that “by no means should Nasheed be allowed to become president”.
It worth noting that these four justices
have joined hands to form the majority ruling in several controversial
Supreme Court cases, most notably the overriding of a parliamentary
removal in the sexual harassment case of former Chair of Civil Service Commission (CSC) Mohamed Fahmy Hassan and the legitimizing of the controversially formed Hulhumale Magistrate Court – which is currently hearing the criminal trial of Nasheed.
Eviction of the Elections Commission’s lawyer
Back to the election annulment case. One of
the most telling observations during the hearings was the attitude
shown by these four justices – most notably Justice Dr Ahmed Abdulla
Didi and Justice Abdulla Saeed – towards the attorney representing the
EC, Hussain Siraj, during the hearing in which concluding statements
from the parties were heard.
Siraj was forced to appear as the senior
counsel for the EC after the former Attorney General and President of
the Maldives Bar Association, Husnu Al Suood, was ejected from the case
for publicly challenging the constitutional legitimacy of the Supreme
Court’s mid-trial order to suspend efforts by the EC to hold the run-off
election.
Subsequently, the attorneys representing
the opposition MDP – who had intervened into the case – were ejected on
similar grounds, prompting the party to withdraw from the case
altogether claiming that “justice had been denied”.
During the hearing in question, Siraj
attempted argue that the injunction issued by the Supreme Court would
contradict the constitutional provision prescribed under Article 111(a),
which explicitly states that a run-off election must be held within 21
days of the first election should no presidential candidate obtain more
than fifty percent of the vote.
The Supreme Court Justices Abdulla Saeed
and Ahmed Abdulla Didi responded harshly, while Justice Abdulla Saeed
questioned the capacity of Siraj to comprehend what the Supreme Court
was doing with regard to judicial review.
Meanwhile, Justice Ahmed Abdulla Didi
stated that no one could speak on the legality of a decision made by the
Supreme Court and that such an action could amount to contempt of
court.
It was also observed that the Justices
repeatedly disallowed Siraj from contesting the constitutionality of
JP’s requests, while no such restrictions were placed on the JP’s legal
counsel Dr Hassan Saeed when he made similar claims.
EC not given opportunity to respond to police report
As mentioned before, one of the fundamental
documents upon which the Supreme Court’s judgement was based upon was
the report produced by the technical team from the Maldives Police
Service, who had cross-referenced the JP’s allegations against the voter
list used by Elections Commission officials.
The existence of such a report by
police was not formally announced until the justices starting using it
as a reference point – despite it playing a pivotal role in forming the
majority ruling of the Supreme Court.
As a result, the
Elections Commission’s legal counsel was never given the opportunity to
challenge or examine the findings of the police report, let alone
produce a counter argument.
This was even mentioned in the dissenting view of Justice Muthasim Adnan. He stated:
“…Among the evidences produced [by the
parties] included evidence that I do not consider as evidence, and a
confidential report to which the parties to the case were not given the
opportunity to respond to.”
However in precedents set forth by the
Supreme Court, and given that it stands as the final authority to decide
on all legal matters, there lies no way as to contest the court’s
decisions.

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