| Main | News | Dhivehi | Editorials | Opinions | About Maldives | About us | Links|Updated: 09 December 2005 17:52
Freedom is in the air

by  freemaldives2003@yahoo.com

It seems ages ago that people used to stop for paying their respects at the mausoleum of Abul Barakat-ul-Barbari, next to the once powerful Velaanaage, now under deconstruction; where now commuters stop only for the traffic light, before accelerating their Honda Waves towards the Sultan park, where the palace stood that once housed the country’s absolute monarchs, but now home only to their pickled remains in a neglected museum overlooking the Grand mosque in the old Ibrahimi Maidhan where, ages ago,  an unruly crowd lynched Mohammed Amin, the first president of Maldives.  Things have changed.

 Forty years ago, when Prime Minister Nasir gave orders to shoot and kill unarmed citizens in Thinadoo, our public cheered him on, the same way they cheered his Sifain as they blew open innocent skulls leaving the mangled brains for crows, before razing the island to the ground and carting off the men to the infamous jail where they were tortured by unrepentant guards and died unheard and unwept, in sharp contrast to today’s pangs of guilt that gnawed at the conscience of young and educated NSS officers, like Aswan, prompting then to put their own careers on line, writing critical reports of human rights abuses in custody, and more surprisingly, actually eliciting some positive responses from the higher ups, long before the untimely -or timely -death  of a convicted drug addict sparked jail riots that ended in a massacre, outraging the citizens of Male and resulting in spontaneous  peaceful mass street protests.   Attitudes have changed. Today’s Maldivians are keenly aware of their rights.

After sweeping Evan Naseem under Sattar Commission’s carpet, washing one’s own small hands with all the oceans of the world and dabbing it with all the perfumes of Arabia, the smell is still there; but it’s not Evan’s corpse rotting.  It’s the sweet fragrance of freedom.  Freedom is in the air.

If you thought you had seen it all –Shamsuddin III ascending to the throne in 1903 in a ceremonial ‘darubaaru’, the likes of which history will never see, and reigning unchallenged as an absolute monarch till 1936, only to be forced to abdicate by a public chanting the new word ‘constitution’, Mohammed Amin concocting a republic to gain absolute power in January 1953, only to be deposed by a bloody revolution barely 6 months later, Nasir finding ‘accountability to parliament’ a convenient ploy to undermine and subvert Prime Minister Ibrahim Faamuladheyri Kilegefaanu, later finding a second republic another convenient ploy to get rid of King Farid and becoming an absolute despot,  Gayoom building a brutal dictatorship on the back of a ruthless NSS and a docile made-to-order constitution that took a record 19 years to make, only to be forced to publicly acknowledge torture and reform the authoritarian constitution; you are yet to see a lot more –opposition parties demanding accountability, public debates on government performance,  opposition rallies in artificial beach, velvet revolutions…

Sitting in a miniscule parliament house gifted by a country that has never seen democracy, the big mouthed brother of the small sized man thinks he is succeeding in holding the floodgates against the tide of democracy, only because he is oblivious of the storm boiling to a gale outside, fanned by a new generation of Maldivians ready to take up their places in the affairs of their nation, only to be blocked by an old guard, completely out of tune with a new Maldives on the fast track to modernity.  Unless he releases pressure, and soon, the gates will burst. 

The days are gone when Hassan Farid banned English education and Beru Dhohotthu could only protest with a hat and a cat on a leash, when people who could barely read became ‘ustazs’, when Zahir Hussein could fire Farooq Ibrahim Didi only for daring to protest against a second rate education for islanders, when students depended exclusively on foreign donated scholarships for higher education.  The Maldivian of today is not the same person who respectfully took all tyranny from despots like Nasir.

Today we may laugh at Hassan Fareed for declaring that Maldives needed only one clause in its constitution, ‘the will of the ruler of the day’, only because we are unaware that it was absolutely true not only in the 1930s, but also true during the rule of Nasir and continued to be true for the first twenty years of Gayoom.   Now he is learning the hard way that it is no longer true.

We may have thought it OK, when Rannabaeyri Kilegefaanu sitting in Bandeyrige considered all government revenue as his personal property, when even while living abroad for years as king-elect he continued to receive that revenue, when Mulee Ibrahim Fulhu and Meedhoo Azeez were jailed for questioning government budget in parliament, when Gayoom contemptuously walked out of the Majlis each year after presenting the budget without waiting for member’s questions, but generation next will not think so. They will question Theemuge budget up to the ultimate need for taking Gayoom’s extended family on extensive foreign tours, from which when they return TV crews are told not to show them on camera.  In future they can’t hide their secret extravaganza from the media.

On returning from his studies broad, what impressed the young Gayoom most about Nasir, as he tells Royston Ellis in his biography, ‘Man for All Islands”, was the atmosphere of fear Nasir generated in Male, a fear about which he tells Ellis he never thought he would get a chance to do anything, but actually got the chance to perfect it into a terrible tool to perpetuate his power, though of course he would not reveal this bit to Ellis. But now it could be some one else’s turn.  Be afraid. Be very afraid.

end................ send comments to freemaldives2003@yahoo.com

 

 
 
 
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