“Tholhath threw the first canister”: MNDF Commander at 7/2 police mutiny

On 7 February 2012, MNDF Staff Sergeant Shafraz Naeem was commanding [Bravo] one of the Bandara Koshi Battalion riot squads that confronted the mutinying SO police in front of the military headquarters. He resigned five days later.

“I have lost faith in the institution,” he told the Commission of National Inquiry [CoNI] later. This is Shafraz Naeem’s account of what occurred during the mutiny, reconstructed from the transcript CoNI’s interview with him on 7 July.  Continue reading

What case, if there is no Judge Abdulla?

The prosecution of former President Mohamed Nasheed is built upon certain assumptions. One of them being that Abdulla Mohamed is a legitimate judge appointed through due process. What if the assumption is untrue? Aishath Velezinee discusses Abdulla Mohamed and fundamental flaws in the Maldivian judiciary in this article first published in Ceylon Today this morning. It is reproduced here with permission of author.

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“I had no choice but to resign”: Nasheed’s testimony to CoNI

by Azra Naseem

On 4 July, 2012, Mohamed Nasheed, President of the Maldives until  7th February that year, testified at the Commission of National Inquiry (CoNI) on how his government came to an end. Present were co-chairs of the Commission Justice Selvam and Ismail Shafeeu, members Dr Ibrahim Yasir, Dr Fawaz Shareef and Ahmed Saeed. Observing for the international community were Sir Bruce Robertson and Professor John Packer.

In essence, my statement is very small…I was forced to resign. I resigned under duress. I was threatened. If I did not resign within a stipulated period it would endanger mine and my family’s life. I understood they were going to harm a number of other citizens, party members. They were going to literally sack the town. I felt that I had no other option, other than to resign.

Despite CoNI being a national inquiry looking into the highly suspicious end of a government elected by the people, all testimonies collected have been kept from the public. Having come into possession of a copy of the transcript of Nasheed’s spoken testimony to CoNI on 4 July, I have summarised its contents and shared it with you here. What is contained here is not Nasheed’s entire testimony that day, but only the parts concerning the last few hours of his presidency. Care has been taken, however, to ensure no information has been taken taken out of context, added, or deleted from the text and to remain faithful to Nasheed’s words as contained in the transcript.

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