Courts in disarray as Maldivian crisis deepens
The attorney general of the Maldives quit yesterday as the country's political crisis deepened with the president and the opposition-controlled parliament wrangling over a new Supreme Court.
Husnu Sood, a close associate of President Mohamed Nasheed, stepped down after accusing the parliament of undermining the constitution in the Indian Ocean archipelago nation.
In a televised addressed, Sood accused the parliament of blocking the establishment of a new Supreme Court by Sunday as required by the 2008 constitution.
"He blamed the parliament for undermining the constitution and not allowing the judicial system to work properly," an official close to Sood told AFP by telephone. "He resigned protesting against the attitude of the parliament."
President Nasheed appointed a panel to carry out the administrative work of the Supreme Court from Sunday after the two-year term of the court expired Saturday without parliament's approving a replacement.
"We are waiting for the Majlis (parliament) to pass an act that establishes a permanent Supreme Court," Nasheed's press secretary Mohamed Zuhair said in a statement.
Nasheed is at loggerheads with the parliament controlled by the People's Party, or the DRP, of former president Maumoon Abdul Gayoom. Attempts at political reconciliation between them have failed, leading to the latest crisis.
Nasheed's cabinet resigned en masse on June 29 saying parliament was blocking their work. The cabinet has since been restored, but parliament is yet to ratify the new appointments.
The luxury holiday paradise of the Maldives embraced Western-style multi-party democracy in 2008 amid high hopes for reforms, but the clash between the executive and the legislature has crippled the administration.
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