Ease visa rules for foreign journos
The main Maldives opposition party said on Wednesday that President Abdulla Yameen's government must ease "draconian" visa measures limiting the number of foreign journalists coming to cover a presidential election on September 23.
Yameen is seeking a second five-year term in the Indian Ocean archipelago popular with tourists. But his main rivals have been jailed for charges ranging from terrorism to attempting to topple the government, leading to doubts abroad about the legitimacy of the vote.
The Maldives has been beset by political instability since a police mutiny forced its first democratically elected leader, Mohamed Nasheed, out of office in 2012.
The main opposition Maldivian Democratic Party (MDP) said in a statement that visa rules were aimed at keeping foreign journalists out "in order to reduce scrutiny of (Yameen's) unlawful and unconstitutional behaviour".
It called for the regulations to be eased.
"The measures should be viewed as a pre-emptive cover-up of planned electoral fraud," it said.
According to new measures, journalists must apply for business visas, for which they need a Maldivian sponsor, and submit forms giving details of previous employment, travel history, qualifications, bank account details and a police clearance certificate, the MDP said.
Previously, the Maldives gave journalists visas on arrival.
Opposition presidential candidate Ibrahim Mohamed Solih called on Twitter for the authorities to "reverse restrictive measures against international journalists".
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