President Dr. Mohamed Muizzu reprimanded parliamentarians from the ruling People’s National Congress (PNC) on Tuesday, after some of them failed to attend the vote on the government’s bill to reduce the Supreme Court bench from seven to five justices.
The amendment to the Judicature Act was submitted on Sunday night by Holhudhoo MP Abdul Sattar Mohamed – a member of PNC – who hold a supermajority at the legislative assembly. It was presented to the floor on Monday, and the preliminary debate took place on Tuesday.
The legislature was accepted for consideration with a majority vote of 64-12. The opposing votes all came from the main opposition Maldivian Democratic Party (MDP) who hold just 12 seats in the Parliament.
However, 10 PNC members did not attend the voting.
In a message to a WhatsApp group of PNC PG members shortly after the vote, President Muizzu said that violating a three-line whip is something that "cannot be done by anyone, not even once".
The message followed one by PNC’s parliamentary group leader Ibrahim Falah, warning disciplinary action against parliamentarians who deliberately violated the three-line whip.
One PNC parliamentarian told Sun that the 10 who did not join the vote include those who are currently out of Male’. But some of the parliamentarians did not join the vote despite attending the sitting.
The amendment to the Judicature Act is designed to downsize the Supreme Court’s bench from seven to five justices – meaning that two incumbent justices will need to be removed.
The proposed bill states that the removal of Supreme Court justices will require the Judicial Service Commission (JSC) to submit a motion for dismissal to the Parliament if they deem a justice to be incompetent, and will require a two-thirds vote of parliamentarians present.
The JSC will be required to submit the names of the justices they want removed to the Parliament within five days the amendment takes effect, and the Parliament must make a decision within seven days once it is submitted.
The Supreme Court bench is currently composed of:
Chief Justice Ahmed Muthasim Adnan
Justice Dr. Azmiralda Zahir
Justice Aisha Shujoon Mohamed
Justice Mahaz Ali Zahir
Justice Husnu Al-Suood
Justice Ali Rasheed Hussain
Justice Dr. Mohamed Ibrahim
The move to submit a bill to reduce the Supreme Court bench followed weekslong allegations by the MDP that the government is seeking to dismiss some of the members of the top court’s bench to influence a case challenging a contentious amendment to add anti-defection provisions to the Constitution.
The constitutional amendment in question was submitted, passed and ratified in quick succession on November 20. The controversial amendment added three more circumstances where parliamentarians will lose their seat, including if they are expelled from their political party.
Former Kendhoo MP Ali Hussain, an attorney-at-law, filed a constitutional case with the top court on November 24, arguing that the amendment violates key provisions of the Constitution, as well as the basic structure doctrine.
Hearings in the case began on February 17 – nearly three months after the case was filed. The state filed a motion to have the case tossed out, arguing that the Supreme Court does not have the jurisdiction to hear it. But the bench decided on February 18 to proceed with the case, and gave the state 10 days to build their case.
Opposition parties, including the MDP and the Democrats have questioned the timing of the bill, and accused the government of attempting attemting to influence the country's highest judicial authority and subvert judicial independence.
During a parliamentary group held on Monday afternoon, many PNC parliamentarians said they had reservations about the bill, with some taking an open stand against it.
Falah later sent a late-night text urging all PNC parliamentarians to back the bill. This is what appears to be being treated as a three-line whip.
The number of justices in the Supreme Court bench have been changed twice in the last decade. In 2014, during former President Abdulla Yameen Abdul Gayoom’s administration, the ruling party passed legislature reducing the bench from seven to five justices.
This was reversed in 2019 during former President Ibrahim Mohamed Solih’s administration.
Pres Muizzu expresses anger after PNC MPs violate whip
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