Police drag former Maldives president into court

Mohamed Nasheed, charged under anti-terror law, was attempting to talk to journalists

Maldives police try to move former president Mohamed Nasheed during a scuffle as he arrives at a courthouse in Male yesterday. Photograph: Adam Sireii/AFP/Getty Images
Maldives police try to move former president Mohamed Nasheed during a scuffle as he arrives at a courthouse in Male yesterday. Photograph: Adam Sireii/AFP/Getty Images

Police have dragged the Maldives' former president into a court, which ordered his detention while he is tried over his decision to arrest a top judge three years ago. Mohamed Nasheed was arrested yesterday and charged under an anti-terrorism law.

He was brought to criminal court today for the first hearing, and was dragged into the courtroom after he resisted police attempts to stop him from speaking to journalists gathered outside. He entered court limping and complained to the judges that he had been manhandled by police. Police told the judges that the fracas occurred because Mr Nasheed tried to stage a sit-in.

The three-judge panel gave Mr Nasheed three days to name his lawyers and ordered him detained until the trial is over. They also asked authorities to give him medical attention.

The Maldives government says the anti-terrorism law covers not only violent terrorism, but a wide array of actions against the state.

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Mr Nasheed resigned as president in 2012 following weeks of public protests against his order to arrest top criminal court judge Abdulla Mohamed. Mr Mohamed was arrested after he released a detained opposition politician.

Mr Nasheed became the country’s first democratically-elected leader in 2008, defeating Maumoon Abdul Gayyoom, who had ruled autocratically for 30 years. But he went on to lose to Mr Gayyoom’s half-brother, Yameen, in the 2013 presidential election.

Mr Nasheed’s detention comes weeks after a key ally defected from Yameen Abdul Gayyoom’s ruling coalition to align with Mr Nasheed’s opposition Maldivian Democratic Party.

The charges against Mr Nasheed include using the military to arrest the judge when it had no authority to do so. He is also accused of detaining Mr Mohamed for weeks without trial or legal counsel and ignoring a supreme court order to release him. – (PA)