Sunday 14 June 2009

Murder Most Foul

The abuse, torture and murder of an 8-month baby is the sickest story I have ever come across in the Maldives. I was utterly shocked and outraged by what I heard. How can people descend to such cruelty?

I had heard that Hon Nasheed MP had submitted a bill to the parliament to address some of these issues. Good, I thought. Of course, there must be greater legal protection given to children and requisite changes made to the legal framework. But changing the legal framework alone will not be enough.

We must really ask ourselves how safe our children are? Does the government have appropriate policies to detect abuse and deter abuse? And is there something that we, the people, can do? A successful strategy must essentially focus on detection, deterrence and prevention.

I suppose no one was surprised to hear that drug abuse was related to the horrible crime. A society in which drug abuse is so widespread will provide safety to no one. Life will be cheap in a country where drug kingpins ostensibly operate with impunity. A polity in which corruption pays will throw up unspeakable crimes.

The brutal murder must make us all stop and think about where the country is headed to, why we have reached this horrible point, and what we are doing wrong. Is life becoming so cheap in this country? Have we lost our souls?

For me, a rude awakening came in 1997, when the government put 14 new islands to tender as tourist resorts. There was a frantic rush by ministers to team up with businessmen to bid for these islands. And there were businessmen frantically trying to enlist Ministers to team up with them to submit bids. To me it seemed that businessmen believed that without a Minister as a partner, they would not win a resort. And worse than that, the Ministers seemed to believe that their name would help secure a resort! What I am saying? The elites of this country had sold their souls, for corruption and material greed.

Such has been the greed and spiritual decay of the elites of this country that it has catapulted entire sections of society into despair, destitution, decadence, and drug abuse. Ours therefore is a society coming apart at the seams, descending into a nightmarish hell. It is one that is unable to care for the weak, vulnerable and helpless, because its strong and powerful have sold their souls to reckless greed, rampant corruption and other shameful deeds. There is so much anger, so much violence and so much hatred just bubbling beneath the surface, that so many of us are probably randomly-timed walking bombs.

For too long, our laws have been used to help the near and dear and punish others. For too long, justice has only served the interests of the powerful. For too long we have allowed our children to be consumed by drugs and violence. For too long we have blatantly promoted double standards and used ethical standards as a tool of social and political hegemony. For too long, the Maldives has been a tale of two cities. In a society in which priority is given to the protection of the rich and powerful, the weak and vulnerable are exposed to the most heinous and unspeakable crimes.

So a bill in parliament, while necessary, is not enough. It is time that we begin to really care about people, promote civil society groups, and allocate enough resources to protect the weakest and the most vulnerable.

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

Agree wholeheartedly!

Anonymous said...

Indian defense would not have been invited to the Maldives in a way which threatens Maldivian sovereignty. In fact, how dare Maumoon and Yamin’s followers accuse the Government of betraying Maldivian sovereignty after Maumoon brutally crushed Maldivian sovereignty for over 30 years?

According to Kant’s “Perpetual Peace” theory only a people whose government rules with that people’s consent can properly be called sovereign. Maumoon never ruled with the consent of the majority. Sovereignty relates to the sovereignty of the people in liberal theory, not to the sovereignty of a ruler. To say that Maumoon and Yamin crushed the sovereignty of the Maldivian people would be a dramatic understatement.

It was the Government who - as activists moved by the Grace of Allah – sacrificed so much for the true sovereignty of the Dhivehin. The MDP cabinet members would, at any time, give their lives for Maldivian freedom; they are warriors for Maldivian peace and sovereignty. The President and the Defense Minster would NEVER betray Maldivian sovereignty. I know them personally, and they are deeply protective of Maldivian sovereignty and would do anything to defend it – I mean ANYTHING! I trust that Dr. Shaheed has matured to the same level of self sacrifice for the people's sovereignty.

There is no way Indian security would have been invited into the Maldives on terms not determined by the Governments commitment to Maldivian sovereignty.

In fact, a few days ago, an MDP Minister, Reeko Moosa Maniku had said that he heard rumors, which he apparently heard were being spread by certain members of the DRP and PA, that the Government could be overtaken by force by the end of Ramadan. Which, given Maldivian history, makes me wonder, perhaps Indians are being invited to protect the Maldives from attacks by outsiders organized by the opposition? That is strictly my wild imagination, I am not stating that this is the case, but given the situation and Reeko Moosa’s comments I wonder whether I am the only person who has wondered who is really threatening Maldivian sovereignty here?

Anonymous said...

whoops, i was meant to put this comment above on another article, hehe

spookyva said...

Very useful material, much thanks for the article.