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Adhurey accuses Solih of orchestrating refusal to approve ministers

Abdul Raheem Abdulla (Adhurey) speaks to press outside the President's Office on June 20, 2023.

Abdul Raheem Abdulla, the chairperson of the main ruling PNC, has accused former president Ibrahim Mohamed Solih of being behind the main opposition MDP’s decision to deny approval to four members of President Dr. Mohamed Muizzu’s cabinet.

The Parliament had been scheduled to take its vote on the 22-member new cabinet at 01:30 pm. But just ahead of the vote, the parliamentary group of MDP – which holds a majority in the Parliament - convened for a meeting, during which it issued a three-line red whip to withhold support to four government ministers.

They are:

  • Ahmed Usham, attorney general
  • Mohamed Saeed, economic minister
  • Dr. Ali Haidar, housing minister
  • Dr. Mohamed Shaheem Ali Saeed, Islamic minister

The move sparked anger from supporters of the government.

As lawmakers from the ruling PPM-PNC coalition protest inside the chambers, a crowd of pro-government supporters have also gathered outside the Parliament building.

Speaking from the crowd gathered outside the Parliament, Abdul Raheem, who also serves as special advisor to President Muizzu, described MDP’s decision to deny approval to four government ministers as “irresponsible.”

He said that approval for cabinets were a mere formality, and that refusal to approve ministers is “senseless” and “untenable.”

“They may deny approval today, but the president has the prerogative to appoint the same people to head the ministries. This place [Parliament] cannot stop it,” he said.

The Democrats, which announced an alliance with MDP last week, has decided they will not approve three of the ministers. But instead of Shaheem, they decided they will withhold support to Moosa Zameer, the foreign minister.

Current Parliament composition:

  • MDP: 43 MPs
  • Democrats: 13 MPs

Together, the two parties are represented by 56 out of 87 MPs at the Parliament. It is therefore highly unlikely that the ministers who got blacklisted by the parties will get approval.

The Parliament’s Government Oversight Committee had approved the cabinet in December, decided that all members of the cabinet meet the requirements stipulated in the constitution.

Earlier on Sunday, the ruling PPM-PNC issued a statement warning that it sees denial of approval to cabinet ministers as a deliberate move to impede the functioning of the government and a blatant disruption of public services.

President Muizzu made a formal request for the approval of his Cabinet on November 20, two days after the new administration took office.

The Parliament had been scheduled to vote on the Cabinet on December 18, but the original committee report was sent back to the committee. The committee later convened for a meeting during recess on December 30, during which they approved the cabinet.

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