Maldivians elect a democracy activist as the next president
February 4, 2009
New Delhi, Oct 29 (EFE). - The Maldivians have voted for change and awarded victory to the opposition Mohamed Nasheed in the first multiparty presidential elections, which Maumoon Abdul Gayoom expelled from power after 30 years, according to data released today by the Electoral Commission.
With all votes counted, Gayoom won the 45.79 percent of the vote, against 54.21 percent for his rival, pro-democracy activist Nasheed, as the provisional count collected on the website of the Electoral Commission.
The winner, 41, appeared at the head of the Maldivian Democratic Party (MDP) and has a long history of struggle for democracy in the Indian Archipelago, to the point that he has been imprisoned several times for his political .
"We ended the autocracy and now have to work for democracy. We have all and there are no conflicts on our part. We want peaceful change and without discrimination, "he told Efe by telephone from Male MDP spokesman Mohamed Zahir.
Nasheed is the first president left multiparty elections in the Indian Ocean archipelago consisting of some 1,200 islands and ruled by Gayoom, 70, since 1978.
He had resorted to constitutional amendments and referendums to perpetuate personal power, but in recent years was forced to reform the system and open to multiparty democracy.
"Dear citizens of the Maldives, I accept the election results of October 28 and respectfully congratulate Mohamed Nasheed and his party," Gayoom said in an interview with radio station Voice of Maldives, Maldivian collected by the website "Minivan News" .
"I offer (a Nasheed) my support during the transition, as stipulated in the Constitution (...) I am proud of my role in the introduction of a new era of democracy," he added, after thanking the public for giving the "opportunity" to lead the country in recent decades.
The outgoing president had been imposed in the first round, on day 8, with 40.63 percent of the vote, below the 50 percent needed for victory.
Nasheed was in second with 25.09 percent, although later three of the four candidates were discarded in the first round gave him their support for the second.
According to data from the Electoral Commission, the 86.58 percent of voters came to the polls to cast their vote yesterday on a total of 209,294 citizens eligible to vote.
Tuesday's elections passed with less disruption than the first round, dotted with allegations of irregularities and even a request to suspend the voting.
"The process has been a triumph of democracy and good that there is a renewal. The elections were a range of cleaning and incidents have been irrelevant, "he told Efe by phone a Western diplomatic source.
After the first results, supporters of Nasheed (better known as "Anni"), took to the streets of the capital to celebrate the victory of their leader and claim their slogan, "other Maldives".
During his activism against the regime of Gayoom, Nasheed was jailed several times and came to be considered by Amnesty International as a "prisoner of conscience."
His electoral victory is the culmination of their struggle for establishing democracy after his activism as a journalist in the 1990s and the creation of his political education, in 2005, shortly after the legalization of political parties.
An engineer by training, a married father of two daughters, Nasheed has promised to end corruption, reduce the cost of living, developing the health system and turn the presidential palace in the first university Gayoom of the Maldives.
The president's inauguration is scheduled for November 11.
Bhutan "learns" to be democratic with a mock election
January 18, 2009
Delhi, April 21, 2007. - In the midst of transition to democracy, everything is set in Bhutan to hold a massive mock election where candidates are high school students, representing fictitious parties with imaginary programs.
The "elections" will begin today in the 47 districts ("dzongda") of the country, with 869 voting tables, a maximum of 1,000 voters per table and some 4,000 officers cleaning process before the actual elections, scheduled for next year.
"Everything is ready for simulation, with four games invented and high school students as candidates," he said in Thimpu (the capital) the head of the Election Commission of Bhutan, Dasho Kunzang Wangdi, told the newspaper "Kuensel".
Moreover, parties-called Blue Thunder Dragon, Red, Green and Yellow-have programs and manifestos fictitious government on matters of industry or environment.
"The two parties with most votes will advance to the second round," the 28th of May, said Wangdi.
The 2008 election will be the first democratic small, isolated country, which, while enjoying a spectacular economic growth (14 percent in 2006), remains one of the most isolated of the world, so much so that even tourism is subject to government monopoly.
The year 2008 also mean the transition from absolute monarchy, in force since 1953, a parliamentary democracy, but so far there are only two games, real-pending registrations.
But first, the Bhutanese in a referendum to ratify a draft constitution of 34 points which was approved in 2004.
"We are excited with democracy knocking at our door," said a shopkeeper in the border town of Samdrup Jongkhar with India, told IANS India agency.
The transition from the realm of the Himalayan foothills from absolute monarchy began in 2001 when the former king, Jigme Singye Wangchuk, ceded his powers of daily management of the affairs of government to a ministerial council.
And in December last year, that monarch, weary of power, abdicated the throne in favor of his son, Jigme Khesar, a 26 year old educated at Oxford (UK) has continued with the process.
"The King encourages people to participate in elections and is personally following the first democratic process," Wangdi said.
According to the head of the electoral commission, officials have established their offices in the districts and election officials have gone to their respective units, while the security staff and survey teams are supervised by their respective coordinators.
Since this is a new experience in the country, accustomed to absolute monarchy, officials have had to delimit constituencies, putting good care that the polls are accessible even in the worst places reported.
The aim is that all Bhutanese asked to vote (about 400,000) to do so by the thundering dragon of your favorite color without that are "disturbed" their daily activities.
"We hope that vote a large number of people, because for them it is important to realize what their true role in the elections," said a confident Wangdi.
But the closest thing that exists in Bhutan to a survey pre-election poll a primary virtual newspaper "Kuensel" shows that only 43 percent of respondents said they participate in the drill.
"We do not know if the policy is good for Bhutan. We still have faith in the monarchy, "he told IANS retired official of a confused 65, P. Dendup.
Successful participation or indifference of the population, at the end of the simulation in Bhutan will be able to count a person once, when I was a school student, was elected by his countrymen to be "prime minister".
"I am not a bird"
December 14, 2008
Video: Chal Re Panch Ja you.
When the old General Pervez Mush Arraf, defeated at the polls, had to resign as chairman, have an assistant came into his office and caught him listening to his favorite song: "Fly bird fly." His assistant asked if probed go into exile. "No, I'm not a bird, Musharraf replied -. And I stay in Pakistan. "
Updated 07/10/09. Musharraf lives in London under heavy police protection and lives by giving lectures at universities in the United States. Not return to Pakistan poses. At least for the moment.
The children of Jawaharlal Nehru
December 14, 2008
The closest polls (or should I say "the machine") are located in the public school district. The police have to limit traffic barriers and facilitate access to voters who come groomed and well clothes, must elect their representative to the conurbation of New Delhi, an electorate the size of Holland and Chile. This should not be happening: in area ity, elections were held for weeks and the results met a few days ago, the third shutout in a row-for the Congress Party.
But in my neighborhood, Rajinder Nagar, elections were suspended until today because the candidate of the Bharatiya Janata Party (radical Hindu is) committed suicide during the campaign. know and what the winning party's vote does not deter many voters, who keep waiting patiently to receive an entry permit from the police.
Delhi Elections are only a prelude to the general, scheduled for spring, but its operation is strictly the same as what is to come: upon arrival, the voter must be identified and sign a statement which contains your name and picture . Is given a rose and an official form he sprinkles a nail with indelible ink. Is the way to prevent people from voting more than once.
And solved the previous procedures, the voter up to a corner, where it picks its choice a "machine" with a modest conveniently camouflaged cardboard concave to ensure the secrecy of the vote. The EVM (Electronic Voting Machine) are one of the most striking phenomena of elections in India. The voter must press a button only. And a beep confirms that the choice is made.
A few meters from the EVM, an officer has a control terminal that ensures transparency and correctness of the process. Check the machine is prohibited, but the official school taught me the template under the EVM: fig ura candidate's name next to the symbol of his party, very useful for the illiterate. At right, a blue button and a brand of light will come on when pressed.
"Quick View", you agree to the final. After the board gives me time to see an EVM of the size of a laptop. The machine is also easy to guess who can not read. This is just the click of a preferred party: the hand, the Congress Party, the lotus, the BJP, the elephant, the Bahujan Samadi castibajos the Party. So up to a dozen symbols.
With EVM, the Indian Election Commission, imagine saving time count 670 million ballots, and money: about $ 40 million, according to official estimates, no longer spent on printing, transportation, storage or security.
The first idea of having electronic machines comes from the late 70's. Although its development took about two decades, today the Electoral Commission boasts a technology that works in areas without electricity (support cells), causes no errors and is fast, maneuverable and easy to transport. The vote remains secret and in addition, the machines are reusable.
Provides solutions in order to streamline the procedures in the "world's largest democracy." This idea-democratic gigantism tends to cause more pride than concern to Indian scribes, aware of the great figures: 670 million voters, over 600,000 people, more than one million machines that meet the Indians with their biggest party . Unfortunately, however, do not EVM to improve or representation of India's population, as subject to deprivation, and the democratic quality of everyday life. They are just machines.
For decades, Indians have been fixed to the procedures of a bureaucracy virtually omnipotent, and that is why the proverbial relinquish many of its mandarins have had devastating effects not only to solve troubles in a civil or access to ration cards. Also to certify the unbridgeable distance between the centers of decision and citizens.
To put it in the words of Professor Amartya Sen, which uses the old school of "Nyaya": the legitimacy of India's democracy should not be only in the ritual of going to the polls every so often. We must also affect the ability of legislators to reach practical social progress, beyond the rules and organizations.
Sixty years after independence, the balance is still poor.
"The weakened institutions, writes the historian Ramachandra Guha - mean that India's democracy can be described as a partial success. India is largely democratic when it comes to holding elections and to allow freedom of movement and expression. But mostly it is not if we consider the operation of political institutions. "
"Could you invent a software to make our democracy work?" I asked an elderly co-chairman of Infosys, Nandan Nilekani at the launch of his book "Imagining India". The joncho dryly said "No".
There, yes, local chiefs, unionism, a cult of leadership, an absence of effective control of power. In many cases, political office or run a finger or inherited within the family, starting with the self-Gand hi Nehru dynasty. But we must not do blood system. If you look past decades and if you look at the turbulent zone countries will have to agree that the great triumph of democracy in India has been its strength.
And the debate really should not be much emphasis on its shortcomings, which are in sight, such as whether the political system is getting its share of profit of the economic reforms of the 90 or, conversely, if the Indians are still airing the old, twisted and administrative practices and uncontrolled parallel circuit in which they manage their politicians.
Not far from Rajinder Nagar preserves the mansion that was the residence of Jawaharlal Nehru during his years delhíes, and during his successive terms as prime minister. Today the building houses a museum and a planetarium attached to attending schoolchildren on excursions organized, something that would appeal to Nehru, who professed a legendary worship by children.
While in the West-and especially in the Hispanic world is the "Mahatma" Gandhi who monopolizes the symbolic brightness of the peaceful struggle for Indian freedom in the case of democracy the country has rather the plot to Jawaharlal Nehru and handful of Democrats to the British who were with him at the dawn of independence.
In hindsight, it is easy to conclude that Nehru was right in its commitment to democracy: that a country as diverse, plural and incomprehensible as India could not succeed unless democracy making the room for the pooling of interests. His was a secular democracy, principlism, incorporating elements of Fabian socialism and the British parliamentary government in a theoretical non-alignment in international affairs.
In retrospect, I say, his way seemed sensible. But at that time, preaching was not so simple: the idea was challenged by Nehru Gandhi, who preferred a semi-mythical rural councils. On the left, the Communists defended their dictatorship of the proletariat (forgot that in India there was no proletariat), and right, shouting religious radicals who sought to make Hinduism the touchstone of the state.
The museum houses several relics Nehru precious for those who want to approach: the firm that made foreign ministry, his deathbed austere, high ceilings Indira's room, hundreds of iconic photographs of the struggle for independence. There are carpeted rooms with fireplace, meeting centers constants, references to Gandhi on walls and shelves.
And above all, the firm which was "worked late hours," the board. A large table with an icon of Buddha - say atheist Nehru and several inkwells, three old phones. Armchairs, sofas. Portraits of his daughter Indira Gandhi, the "Mahatma" by Abraham Lincoln. On one shelf rests a globe. There are hundreds of books on shelves and other outside: the very European Sartre, Gunnar Myrdal. Only one is on the table, all of a manual of good "gentleman": the Oxford Dictionary of English, concise version.
The British Nehru finally get their way. Although his successors rewrote his script with varying degrees of success, the Indian spacecraft continues in its work. Of the four legacies nehrudianos, democracy, secularism, socialism and neutrality, the first is the strength that keeps most symbolically and actually, for obvious resulting deficiencies. As the population continues to grow, every time that India holds general elections, the process becomes the largest democratic exercise ever conducted on earth.
And now, to take part, just press a button. Or wait for the accident: while the people still vote in Rajinder Nagar, someone knocks on the door. "Have you voted and all the people of this house?" Says a middle-aged woman. "If you did not vote, join me, I'll go with you, if desired. And we can talk on the way, "he adds.
I must say that everyone has (have) voted. "There will be voted for the elephant, I hope," goodbye. And for this "invitation to vote" no EVM machine to save us. Curious democracy.



















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