A court in the Maldives on Monday refused bail to former president Mohamed Nasheed after he was arrested on terrorism charges and denied access to his lawyers, his party said. Police forcibly dragged the opposition leader into the court in the capital Male, ignoring his plea to be allowed to walk in himself, and denied him medical attention though the court had ordered "necessary treatment."
Nasheed told the court that his arm hurt after police violently pushed him to the ground, but the three-judge bench brushed aside his complaints, only asking police to grant him treatment after the hearing. Instead of taking him to hospital in Male, however, Nasheed was seen being taken away by boat to the nearby prison islet of Dhoonidhoo. His shirt buttons were missing and he appeared in pain throughout the brief hearing.
"The court ordered president Nasheed to be kept in police custody until the end of the trial," said a spokeswoman for the opposition Maldivian Democratic Party (MDP), Shauna Aminath. The MDP has argued that his arrest on "trumped-up charges of terrorism" is an attempt to shut down growing opposition to the government of President Abdulla Yameen before a planned protest rally on Friday.