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Maldives parties who accused Mohamed Muizzu of ‘anti-India pivot’ will boycott his parliamentary address today

Updated on: Feb 05, 2024 08:13 AM IST

The presidential statement will be made today at 9 a.m. by Maldivian President Mohamed Muizzu.

Male: The two main opposition parties of the Maldives, the Maldivian Democratic Party and The Democrats Party will not attend President Mohamed Muizzu's statement in the parliament today, the country's media reported. This came days after the two parties slammed Muizzu's anti-India pivot.

The opposition accused Mohamed Muizzu of having an anti-India pivot.(Reuters file photo)

The majority-holding MDP hasn't yet disclosed the purpose of the boycott of Mohamed Muizzu's presidential address. However, the Democrats said they would abstain from the meeting because of the re-appointment of three ministers who had been rejected by the parliament.

Also read: Mohamed Muizzu recalls 'sovereignty' vow in Maldives parliament, mentions India troops withdrawal

The presidential statement will be made today at 9 a.m. by Maldivian President Mohamed Muizzu, according to the media outlet called Mihaaru.

The President is required by the Constitution to address Parliament at the first session of the first term of the year, outlining the state of the nation and outlining his recommendations for how to bring improvements.

Opposition slammed Muizzu government

Last month, amid a diplomatic row, the two parties had described India as the country's "most long-standing ally".

Last month, tensions between the Maldives and India heightened as the former's ministers made disparaging comments against Prime Minister Narendra Modi. New Delhi registered a formal protest against the ministers over the remarks made over the PM's visit to Lakshadweep.

Also read: India drops to 5th position on Maldives' top 10 tourism markets amid diplomatic row, China at 3

The remark created a massive controversy on social media with Indian celebrities asking the masses to boycott visiting the country. Within three weeks of the row, India became the country's fifth largest tourism market from third at the start of 2024.

Recently, the the Maldivian Foreign Ministry said India will remove its 80 soldiers stationed in the country by May.

The first set of Indian troops will leave by March 10 and the rest by May 10, the Maldives said, citing an agreement reached at a high-level meeting in the Indian capital.

India's external affairs ministry said after the meeting that the two countries "agreed on a set of mutually workable solutions to enable continued operation of Indian aviation platforms" that provide humanitarian services to Maldives.

New Delhi had traditionally the Maldives' closest ally for decades. However, its ties have been under strain since Mohamed Muizzu was elected president of the country last year.

With inputs from ANI, Reuters

 
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