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The Independent UK
The Independent UK
World
Peter Popham

Amal Clooney and Cherie Booth take opposite sides in Maldives

Cherie Booth set up the corporate legal consultancy, Omnia Strategy in 2011, intending to make money from the private sector (AFP/Getty) (AFP/Getty)
pIt’s a tinpot family dictatorship masquerading as a democracy and squatting on a couple of dozen atolls lost in the Indian Ocean, with a total population about the size of Cardiff./p pYet the Maldives crystallises a number of the world’s most acute anxieties: global warming, Islamist militancy, the tendency of democratic reform right across the Muslim world to be hijacked and trampled by religious extremism. In the past week, it has also offered the first opportunity for Britain’s two most prominent female lawyers, Cherie Booth and Amal Clooney, to square up to each other./ppGiven her record, it is no surprise that Mrs Clooney should be defending outraged democratic principle, in the form of the ex-president Mohamed Nasheed, the first elected head of state in the Maldives, as he fights a a href=http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/asia/first-democratically-elected-leader-of-maldives-jailed-for-13-years-on-terrorism-charges-10108261.html title=First democratically elected leader of Maldives jailed for 13 years on terrorism charges13-year jail sentence/a that Amnesty International called “a travesty of justice”./ppNor, given the uncanny attraction of the Blairs to despots from Beijing to Qatar by way of Kazakhstan, is it startling to learn that Ms Booth is advising the government of President Abdulla Yameen, brother of the man who ruled the Maldives with an iron fist for 30 years, and whose court – over which the government insists it has no influence – put Mr Nasheed in jail./pp a class=escenic-gallery href=http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/asia/the-battle-to-save-the-maldives-9904939.html id=9904939 The battle to save the Maldives /a  /ppWith its advertising come-on as “the sunny side of life”, its aquamarine waters and broad blonde beaches, the Maldives are an unbeatable symbol of tropical self-indulgence. Yet its unique charm is also the source of its great peril: it will be one of the first victims when global warming causes the level of the oceans to rise a little higher – hence ex-President Nasheed’s stunt some years back of holding an underwater cabinet meeting./ph5READ MORE: a href=http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/asia/expresident-of-the-maldives-arrested-for-alleged-illegal-detention-of-criminal-court-chief-judge-10062767.htmlEx-President of the Maldives arrested/abra href=http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/asia/is-it-too-late-to-save-the-maldives-from-climate-change-and-islamic-extremism-9901424.htmlIs it too late to save the Maldives from climate change and Islamic extremism?/a/h5pBut there may be a greater and more pressing peril even than drowning. Converted to Islam in 1153, the Maldives countenances no other faith. Its traditional form of the religion was mild, but the recent influence of Saudi Wahhabism is reflected in executions and judicial floggings, while new regulations require all publications to pass tests of conforming to Islamic principles or face official suppression./pp img alt=amal-clooney.jpg src=http://www.independent.co.uk/incoming/article10478378.ece/BINARY/amal-clooney.jpg width=w460/ span class=caption Human Rights lawyer Amal Clooney /span /ppIf the return, after a brief reformist interlude coinciding with the Nasheed years, of the old repressive ways was intended to choke off extremism, it appears to be having the opposite effect: up to 200 Maldivians are believed to have travelled to Iraq and Syria to fight with Isis, and a number have already died there; the terror group’s black flag is flown at demonstrations in Malé, the capital, with impunity; and, in an interview with emThe Independent on Sunday /emlast year, a href=http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/asia/islamic-state-the-maldives--a-recruiting-paradise-for-jihadists-9731574.html title=Islamic State: The Maldives - a recruiting paradise for jihadistsMr Nasheed painted an alarming picture of his nation as an Islamist tinderbox/a./pp“Radical Islam is getting very, very strong,” he said. “Their strength in the military and the police is very significant. They have people in strategic positions within both. Of the 200 people who have gone to jihad, the vast majority are ex-military.” And although he said there was no direct threat to the one million-plus tourists who holiday on the islands every year, he feared that this could change. “[The government] don’t want to hit the tourism industry because they are getting such good ‘milk’ out of it … Everybody wants the money out of that.” But this equilibrium, he said, was perilous, and cited the sudden collapse of the Iraqi city of Mosul which heralded the triumph of Isis. “If you look at how Mosul fell – the top brass ran away because Isis had already infiltrated the rank and file. I have a feeling that our police and military are already taken. Eventually, the Islamists will cause havoc in the Maldives. I have no doubt about it.”/ppFortunately for the government, this authoritative Cassandra can no longer spread his alarming predictions because he is due to spend the next dozen years in jail. Having been forced from power in 2012 by a coup, earlier this year he was convicted of “terrorism” by a Malé court for his action in ordering, while still president, the arrest of a judge he believed to be corrupt. Mrs Clooney called the verdict “a mockery”. It was certainly a mockery of language./ppDespite the exciting Clooney vs Booth billing, the two are not expected to pop up on opposite sides of a courtroom. Ms Clooney wound up her four-day visit on Thursday, and on Friday was discussing the case with political leaders and diplomats in Sri Lanka. But her conclusions were bleak: human rights in the Maldives were “deteriorating day by day”, she said. If the government refused to free Mr Nasheed, “the next stage will be to pursue targeted sanctions”./ppHow Ms Booth, the wife of the man once renowned for having the surest touch in British politics, ended up on the side of the Maldives government is a puzzle. As a spokesman for Mr Nasheed put it: “This dictatorship has locked up the Maldives’ first democratically elected president and the entire Maldives opposition, while human rights are in free-fall. It is hard to believe that Cherie Blair would want to keep company with such thugs of ill repute.”/ppA spokesman for her firm, a href=http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/cherie-blairs-firm-accused-of-unethical-profiteering-over-deal-with-maldives-10330023.html title=Cherie Blair’s firm accused of unethical profiteering over deal with MaldivesOmnia Strategy/a, said its task was “to assist the government in strengthening democracy, the rule of law, and restoring investor confidence”. The collaboration was “part of the government’s broader strategy  for democratic consolidation”. Omnia  had been hired to “advise on legislative reform to improve transparency and  accountability”./p
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