The Saturday visit - the first by an Indian head of state since 2011 - is expected to reset strained ties with Maldives.
Prime
Minister Narendra
Modi will make his first-ever visit to the tropical island nation
of Maldives for the swearing-in of its new president amid ongoing
rivalry between New Delhi and Beijing for influence in the Indian
Ocean.
The
Saturday visit — the first by an Indian head of state since 2011 —
is expected to reset strained ties with Maldives
as Ibrahim Mohamed Solih, a veteran opposition politician, takes over
after successfully ousting former pro-China president Abdulla Yameen.
Solih’s
new government is expected to end political uncertainty in the South
Asian archipelago nation that preceded a tense election this
September. Former president Yameen had locked away opposition figures
and judges amid international condemnation, including unusually
strident comments from India.
Yameen
had also taken numerous loans from China that pushed the country into
debt, like other countries in the region including Sri Lanka and
Pakistan. Solih’s Maldivian Democratic Party had taken an
anti-China stance.
“India
is in a position to gain some lost ground in Maldives,” said K
Yhome, who specialises in India’s neighborhood at the New
Delhi-based Observer Research Foundation. “The fact that Prime
Minister Modi has agreed to attend the swearing-in sends a message
that India supports the new government. Though it remains to be seen
how Solih continues his posturing” after elections.
Solih’s
triumph in the Maldives contrasts with political turmoil in Sri
Lanka, where the president has tried to unilaterally sack his prime
minister and appoint the country’s former pro-China strongman
leader Mahinda Rajapaksa in his place. That move, which appears
uncertain amid a parliamentary vote and political upheaval earlier
this week, was similarly condemned by nations including the US.
Modi’s
trip comes amid a broader push by the US, India, Japan and Australia
— which have struck a new partnership known as the Quad — to
counter China’s cash infrastructure lending in the region.
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