Published on 12:00 AM, October 16, 2018

POST-POLLS MALDIVES

Yameen blames defeat on 'disappearing ink'

EC insists petition should be dismissed

Outgoing Maldives President Abdulla Yameen has told the Supreme Court that disappearing ink and specially treated ballot papers were to blame for his heavy election defeat last month.

The comments came as the court considered a petition by Yameen to have the September 23 election result annulled due to what his party called "rampant" vote-rigging.

Yesterday afternoon, the five-judge bench put off the case until today when it will announce whether to allow testimony from three unnamed witness named by Yameen's lawyers.

His lawyers told a packed court room that the trio of yet unnamed witnesses could substantiate Yameen's allegations.

However, the country's independent Elections Commission (EC) through its lawyers insisted that the petition was based on false allegations and should be dismissed.

Local media also reported four of the five election commissioners have fled the country and sought refuge in neighbouring Sri Lanka following death threats after Yameen lost the September 23 vote.

At a hearing on Sunday which resumed yesterday, Yameen's lawyer Mohamed Saleem accused the printer of coating ballot papers with an unnamed substance to make votes marked in Yameen's box vanish.

Saleem said a "special pen with disappearing ink" was also given to people who were going to vote for his client, a reporter at the hearing said. Counting officials also allegedly carried secret pens with which they marked ballots for the opposition.

A lawyer for the EC denied any wrongdoing, including using any special ink. Yameen had also accused the EC of colluding with the printer of the ballots.