AhlulBayt News Agency

source : AFP
Saturday

11 March 2017

1:31:40 PM
817014

Maldivian opposition protests Saudi king’s visit

(AhlulBayt News Agency) - A coalition of opposition parties and dissidents said they would stage street demonstrations against the alleged sale of islands when the Saudi monarch and his 1,000-strong entourage visits the Maldives.

Maldivian opposition parties protested Friday a planned visit by King Salman following reports that Saudi business interests were buying an entire atoll in the politically-troubled Indian Ocean republic.

“We will make it very clear to the Saudi Royals that we are against the sale of our land,” former Maldives foreign minister Ahmed Naseem told reporters in Colombo.

He said there were persistent reports in the Maldives that either the Saudi government or a Saudi business entity was buying an atoll of 28 small coral islands for billions of dollars.

The announcement by the Colombo-based Maldives United Opposition (MUO) came a day after the government of President Abdulla Yameen denied it was selling islands to the Saudis or anyone else.

However, the MUO insisted that the government was planning to go ahead with a deal that could be worth twice the US$5.2 billion economy of the island nation of 340,000 Muslims.

He is due to travel to China and Japan before ending the tour in the Maldives.

Land is scarce in the Maldives where 99.9 percent of its territory is sea and the nation’s 1,192 tiny coral islands account for just 300 square kilometres (115 square miles) of land.

However, the islands are strategically located — scattered some 800 kilometres (500 miles) across the equator — straddling the main East-West international shipping lanes.

The country is a popular upmarket holiday destination but its image has been hit by political unrest in recent years.

Opposition leader and former president Mohamed Nasheed is currently living in exile in London after he was jailed on terror-related charges widely criticised as politically motivated.

The low-lying islands are also threatened by rising sea levels and the United Nations has warned the country could be underwater by 2100.



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