Published on 12:00 AM, October 18, 2018

Maldives leader accepts defeat

Yameen says preparing to step down with no regrets on any decisions

Outgoing Maldives President Abdulla Yameen told the nation Wednesday he accepted defeat in last month's elections, even as the strongman ruler lobbies the Supreme Court to call a fresh poll.

In a televised address to the nation, Yameen made no reference to his controversial legal bid to annul the results of the election he lost despite stifling his opponents.

"This is my final address to the nation before I leave," said the 59-year-old whose term in office ends on November 17.

"During my tenure, the most difficult thing for me was my failure to learn about the people. I just couldn't find out what shapes their wishes."

Yameen said all his decisions when in power were made in the interest of the people.

"Even today, as I prepare to take leave from official duties, I would like to say that I have no complaints or reservations about my decisions," he said.

Yameen had already conceded defeat, under pressure from abroad, after his opponent Ibrahim Mohamed Solih emerged the winner in the September 23 poll.

But last week he filed a petition against the results in the Supreme Court, defying threats of possible sanctions.

The court Tuesday refused to accept the testimony of three unnamed witnesses put forward by Yameen's lawyers, suggesting the bench was moving closer to ruling against him.

Yameen alleges the country's elections commission used disappearing ink on ballot papers to unfairly favour the opposition.

The court's rejection of the witnesses has all but cleared the final obstacle before Solih, a relatively unknown opposition figure, takes the oath of office on November 17.

Ahead of the court hearing in the capital Male, the United States had warned "appropriate measures" would be taken if the will of the Maldivian people was undermined.

Washington and its allies have been concerned by growing Chinese influence in the strategically positioned Indian Ocean archipelago, especially under Yameen's authoritarian rule.