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The president-elect of the Maldives Mohamed Muizzu said he will stick to his campaign promise to remove Indian military personnel stationed in the Muslim-majority archipelago state, promising he would initiate the process.
According to international media reports, Mohamed Muizzu told his supporters on Monday night at a celebration of his election victory that he wouldn’t stand for a foreign military staying in the Maldives against the will of its citizens.
“The people have told us that they don’t want foreign military here,” he said.
Outgoing President Ibrahim Mohamed Solih, who was elected president in 2018, was battling allegations by Muizzu that he had allowed India an unchecked presence in the country.
Muizzu’s party, the People’s National Congress, is viewed as China-friendly.
Muizzu’s main campaign theme was about an alleged threat to the Maldives’ sovereignty by some Indian military personnel on an island, part of the party’s yearslong “India out” strategy.
Solih insisted that the Indian military’s presence in the Maldives was only to build a dockyard under an agreement between the two governments and that his country’s sovereignty won’t be violated.
Former President Abdulla Yameen, leader of the People’s National Congress, made the Maldives a part of China’s Belt and Road Initiative during his presidency from 2013 to 2018. The initiative is meant to build railroads, ports and highways to expand trade..
On Sunday, Yameen was transferred from prison to house arrest, already fulfilling one of Muizzu’s campaign promises before he officially takes office on November 17.
The Maldives is made up of 1,200 coral islands in the Indian Ocean, located by the main shipping route between the East and the West.
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