Waheed’s special adviser plotted GMR’s ouster?
NEW DELHI: Hassan Saeed, the Maldivian president Waheed's special adviser, is being seen as the
Machiavellian force behind Male's decision to terminate the GMR agreement. According to high-level sources, this
Malaysia-educated president of a tiny Dhivehi Quamee Party has convinced Waheed
to use this issue as a platform for forthcoming presidential elections due next
year.
Masood Imad, spokesperson for Waheed, denies
this. "Saeed is only a special advisor and is currently not even in the
country," he said.
Imad said Indian companies continue to be
present and welcomed in the Maldives. "The Maldivian government had
offered to send a special envoy of the president, the defence minister, to
India to explain our stand on the GMR issue. But that request is still pending
with the MEA," he added.
MEA sources said the government had received the
request for a special envoy, to which the Indian government had responded by
saying he would be welcomed and received appropriately. As it turned out, the
envoy did not come, and the Maldivian foreign minister Abdul Samad Abdulla
arrived here last week for consultations with his Indian counterpart Salman
Khurshid.
Saeed had dashed off a letter to Prime Minister
Manmohan Singh seeking India to help terminate the agreement. The GMR issue was
so explosive, he said, it was contributing to the rise of extremism and
anti-India, anti-GMR sentiment inside the Maldives. GMR, he alleged, had paid
off politicians in the Maldives which had turned public opinion against them.
Apart from levying an airport tax, Saeed said, GMR had evicted local workers
and replaced them with Indians. GMR sources indicated the converse was true.
Maldives has given GMR until December 8 to get
out of the Male airport. GMR's CEO Andrew Harrison, in a statement, said, "The injunction clearly prevents them from
taking the action outlined in their notice issued to us stating that the
airport would be taken over at the end of the 7 day period. We remain resolute
in our position and there is no question of an offer being made and certainly
no question of any alleged offer being accepted as we will simply not agree to
our rights nor the injunction being undermined in any way."
This can only have an ugly ending. While there
has been no communication with Waheed, Abdulla told Khurshid that they were
determined to evict GMR. India can either look the other way, or adopt
strong-arm tactics neither of which has any good implications.
Ousted president Mohamed Nasheed wrote this
week, "India should have foreseen the consequences its investments would
later face in endorsing a regime consisting of elements that had previously
shown its disapproval towards major Indian investments. India should have taken
its time to assess the political situation of the country and should have
confirmed the legitimacy of the controversial regime before accepting it.
However, failure to do so resulted in the scrapping of its single largest
investment by the very government it had recognized."
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/india/Waheeds-special-adviser-plotted-GMRs-ouster/articleshow/17495508.cms
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