COLOMBO: Maldives President Maumoon Abdul Qayoom, Asia's longest running autocratic leader, is under international pressure to stop the crackdown on pro-democracy protesters in the Indian Ocean archipelago.
Colombo-based diplomats, who declined to be named, said a high-powered European Union delegation from EU-member missions based in Colombo was expected to fly to the capital Male at the weekend to urge the Maldives government to stop its harassment of political opponents.
Qayoom's government, which does not allow opposition political parties in the country, justified the crackdown and the state of emergency saying it was in danger of being toppled.
"Qayoom has to step down. That's the only way," Mohamed Latheef, founder and spokesperson for the Maldivian Democratic Party (MDP), told IPS. The MDP is a political party in exile based in the Sri Lankan capital - which is just an hour's flight away from Male.
Latheef's call has been echoed by many young Maldivians, some of whom recently carried banners saying, "Qayoom Should Quit" - a rare sight in a nation of some 340,000 people living for 25 years under a one-party government headed by Qayoom.
The Maldives government ordered a crackdown after political dissidence snowballed last week when protesters took to the streets demanding democracy and calling for the release of all political prisoners. Curfew has been declared in the Indian Ocean archipelago, which is now under a state of emergency.
The British-owned telecommunications firm, Cable and Wireless - which handles Internet access in the Maldives - has confirmed that the government severed all Internet connections on August 13.
"This grave and irresponsible step is unprecedented anywhere in the world and President Qayoom has embarked on a spiral of repression that is extremely worrying," the Paris-based media watchdog Reporters Sans Frontieres said in a statement.
Some members of Parliament are among the 90 people believed to have been arrested after the demonstrations. The former secretary-general of the South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation (SAARC), Ibrahim Hussein Zaki, is one of those currently detained by Qayoom's government.
Both Britain and the United States on Tuesday criticized the crackdown and raised concerns about the state of emergency. A Foreign Office statement said the British government was "concerned by reports of large numbers of arrests, including of members of the Maldives parliament."
The US government expressed concern that recent unrest in the Maldives would undermine the Indian Ocean archipelago's commitment to democratic reforms, and called for those arrested during anti-government demonstrations to be treated humanely.
"The United States notes with concern recent unrest in the Maldives connected to the Aug 12-13 demonstrations on the capital island, Male," said a State Department statement.
"We hope that the government of Maldives' reaction to these demonstrations, including subsequent arrests of protesters and political leaders will not undermine the process of political and constitutional reform to which the government of the Maldives has committed itself," the statement added.
"The United States also calls for all detainees to be treated humanely, fairly, and in accordance with the Maldivian Constitution and international norms of human rights," Deputy State Department Spokesman Adam Ereli said in the statement.
Latheef, a former member of Parliament, founded the MDP in Colombo after his 31-year-old activist daughter was arrested by police on September 21, 2003, for wearing a T-shirt which said "Stop Brutality".
He took the first flight out of Male the next day and has not returned since fearing that he would be jailed for forming the pro-democracy party which has the support of many of the country's top residents including MPs, businessmen, civil society activists and some sections of the judiciary.
But observers point to the fact that unless economic pressure is exerted on Maldives, it will be business-as-usual for Qayoom. -Dawn/The Inter Press News Service.