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Category Archives: Development

People's Role and Participation in National Development


Thursday evening I stole away some time from an unusually back to back schedule to appear as a guest on Musthafa Hussain’s show “Alhugandu Dhekeygothugai…” (I think ) on TV Maldives. I was a guest at the show with Mota Hassan Manik, who has retired after 65 years of service to the government which he began way back in the Security Force (Sifain). The show is scheduled to air on TVM this Saturday after the English News at nine o’clock.

I am not quite sure whether I was able to clearly express my thoughts on the subject during the program. I have a problem with being understood when I talk. My mother tells me often that I need to learn to speak clearly. Anyway, I would definitely look forward to feedback and comments to my thoughts.

We were also shown clips of points of view expressed by the public on the same subject. What I observed in what people had to say was, whether development is a role of the people or the government. A wholesome ownership and responsibility has now become an issue for the general public, it seems from the clips.

The point of opinion, I tried to express in my own way is to focus on the fact that we have new challenges to be addressed in the current times. We had previously had the wholehearted participation of people in developmental activities. But there are challenges to that practise today. What I believe is that the process of people participation in development need to be institutionalized in a manner that is appropriate to the challenges faced by the people today.

In the last two decades we have focused so much on investment in the material resources that we perceived to contribute to development, namely the fisheries and tourism related resources. In the process we failed to take note of the most miraculous resource available to man for development – the human mind. I believe the challenge for us is to create and develop the minds of our young people.

It is our attitude of mind (as pointed out by Alfred Tack) that will determine the altitude of our life.

 
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Posted by on July 2, 2008 in Development, Nation Building

 

Chasing Away Rannamaari Once and For All


It was over eight hundred years ago that the King of Maldive Island decreed that his people convert to Islam in order to get rid of Rannamaari that took away the lives of the young girls who reached puberty in this nation. Little did the people know that the Rannamaari that haunted the community of the capital island was no less than the King himself. [Otherwise why would this monster who lived in the faraway oceans have a fetish with just the children on the island where the King resided?]

The King [the Rannamaari] himself knew well that with the arrival of “foreign” civilization that was no more possible to avert, his only cause of action for existence was to change his mindset and his taste for pleasure. Similarly, today we are at the cross roads of civilization and the “foreigners” have engulfed us in a new sense of civilization.

I believe it is time, as the modern day Rannamaari which has existed in its phantom form has become exposed and needs to be looked at to adjust with the trying times. Our Rannamaari (in this modern day) is our attitude towards our young children who are vulnerable to our sick and perverted mindsets. This Rannamaari exists within us, and supports the fetish desires of a number of people amongst us.

It is time we get rid of this Rannamaari. Unfortunately, there is no Abul-Barakaathul-Barbary or Thibreezee to do that for us. We have to do it ourselves, because it is within us! It is not the King anymore. The King is us!

We need to “convert” our attitude to respect the rights of our children; to believe that they are not to be abused but to be loved and cared for; that we have a responsibility to provide a caring environment that is supportive and encourages them to develop into responsible global citizens capable of purposeful existence.

Let’s get rid of this Rannamaari once and for all!

 
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Posted by on June 25, 2008 in Development, My Argument

 

The Celebration of a Life Time!


The country is ticking like a time-bomb ready to explode. There is complete anarchy everywhere. There is a complete cessation of ordinary life and law and order. The Maldives is celebrating the unpcrecedented success of its footballers, who have proven themselves to be national heroes.

A woman talking to a national radio chat show said that she is so happy that the opening goal of the championship which saw the country victorious against mighty India was scored by Shifan who hails from Haa Alif Atoll – the land that produced the nations saviour from the Portuguese rule.

Anchors on national radio and tv highlighted the need for calm and respect by the celebrating crowds when they passed mosques and hospitals. The event to receive the footballers which started around four thirty in the afternoon lasted till after eight thirty in the evening. The usually ultra-religous people continued to celebrate and play music through the Maghrib and Isha prayers in defiance of tradition.

As one person put it, there are quarters within the society who are shocked, awed and saddened by the new found unity that the national footballers have brought to this nation divided by religous and political ideologies that were tearing apart the social fabric that held us together. It is indeed true that people have decided to put aside their differences for the nation. It is a beautiful sight; one that will be fondly remembered for a long time.

Despite the mixed sentiments, there is no doubt that Maldivians have never been happier as a people and as a nation. It is a time to celebrate like never. Perhaps, codes of conduct and respect for others and maintaining order through better organization would follow, the next time. It is a nation in joyful shock and awe indeed.

This football team has given the young people of the nation, something worth looking up to. A reason for believing in a future.

 
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Posted by on June 16, 2008 in Development, Nation Building

 

Male' Public Transport System: Non-Existent


This evening I was waiting for my father at Hulhule Ferry Jetty, to go with thim to the airport, to see him off after a visit to Male’. When I called my son, he said they were unable to get a taxi. So I flagged down a taxi and asked the driver whether he could bring a person from a house in Galolhu. He told me that would be 40 Rufiyaa for two trips. I said that would be fine and he went off.

When the taxi came back, I gave him a 100 Rufiyaa note and he returned me change 55 Rufiyaa. A single piece of luggage was put in the dicky, so he had to charge for it.

Then, as we came back from Hulhule, we got down from the ferry and I walked to the second taxi in queue as the driver of the first one was having a smoke. The driver told me that it would be 30 Rufiyaa, perhaps seeing that we had no luggage. We decided to walk to Villingili ferry terminal.

This is the kind of hassle that people have to go through because of a non-existent public transport system in Male’, the capital of Paradise. This is just one of the hassles that people go throught. But, ofcourse it will remain because the Honorable Members of the People’s Majlis and the senior bureaucrats of the government will not have to go through the same hassle. It does not exist on their top priority agenda.

It is not only that, but several other things such as men (fathers, husbands, brothers and boyfriends) having to “taxi” their women to and from work – ofcourse, causing congestion and parking problems, and loss of productivity in the workforce. The situation also creates a real need for each family to have a few motorbikes due to the negligence of agencies responsible for creating a public transport infrastructure.

The situation remains, after multiple studies much advertised in the media and false promises and hopes from various agencies of the government, who also shift blame amongst one another. I guess we would have to wait for God to Will, and then it would happen!

Related post

 
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Posted by on June 7, 2008 in Development, My Concerns

 

Benku Khidhumathuge Vaahaka ….! (Dhivehi)


އަޅުގަޑު ދިވެހިރާއްޖޭގެ ގައުމީބޭންކު ކަމުގައިވާ “ބެންކް އޮފް މޯލްޑިވްސް” ގެ ހެޑްއޮފީހަށް ގުޅީ ކުޑަލޯނެއް ހޯދުމަށެވެ. އެއީ އަޅުގަޑުގެ ކޮއްކޮމެން ގެ ހަދަންވެގެން، ގެހެދުމަށް ހޭދަވާނެކަމަށް އަޅުގަޑުމެންބެލި އަށާރަމަސްދުވަހުގެ ތެރެއިން ހަމަސްދުވަހު ތަނެއްކުއްޔަށްހިފުމަށް ހިގާނެޚަރަދު އެކަމަށްލިބިފައިވާ ފައިސާއިން ދެކޮޅުޖެހެން ނެތުމުންނެވެ. ގެހެދުމަށް ބަޔަކަށް ދޫކުރި އެއްބަސްވުން ހެދިއިރު ހުރިވަރުގެ ގާތްގަޑަކަށް ދެގުނަޔާކައިރި މިންވަރަކަށް ތަންތަނުގެކުލި މައްޗަށް ގޮސްފައިވާތީއެވެ. ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު
އެހެންކަމުން، ގެހަދާދީފައި ދެބުރިއެމީހުން ބޭނުންކުރުމަށްފަހު، އެހެންބުރިތައް އަޅުގަޑުމެން ބޭނުންކުރާގޮތަށް ގެހަދައިދޭން ތަނާއިހަވާލުވިމީހުންގެ އަތުން، އެއްބަސްވުމުގައި އޮތްވަރަށްވުރެ އިތުރަށް އެމީހުންއަތުން ފައިސާނުހޯދާ ބެންކުން ލިބިދާނެތޯ ބެލުމަށް އަޅުގަޑުމެން ބޭނުންވީއެވެ. ކަންދިމާވާގޮތުން، އަޅުގަޑުގެ ކޮއްކޮމެންގެ އަދި އެހެންބިންކޮޅެއްވެސް މާލޭގައި އޮތުމާއި އެތަނުގައި އިމާރާތެއްކޮށް ބަޔަކަށް ކުއްޔަށްވެސް ދީފައި ހުރުމާއެކުގައެވެ. ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު
އަޅުގަޑު ބެންކަށްގުޅާ، ކަމާބެހޭގޮތުން ގުޅަންޖެހޭނީ ކޮންމުވައްޒަފަކާތޯ ބެލީމެވެ. ކޮންމެއަކަސް އެތައްފަހަރަކުގުޅާ އޭނަޔާއި ނުގުޅިގެން އުޅެމުންގޮސް އެންމެފަހުން އެކަމާގުޅޭ އެހެންމުވައްޒަފަކާ ވާހަކަދެއްކީމެވެ. އޭނާއަށް މިހުރިހާވާހަކައެއް ކިޔާދިނުމުން ބުނީ ބެންކުން ލޯނުދޫކުރަނީ ގެއިމާރާތްކުރުމަށްކަމަށެވެ. އަޅުގަޑުމެން މިބޭނުންވެގެންއުޅޭ ކަންތައްތަކަށް ލޯނުދޭގޮތަށް ހަމަޖެހިފައިނެތްކަމަށެވެ. ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު
ކޮލެޓަރަލްގެ ގޮތުގައި މިހާރުވެސް ކުޑަކުއްޔަކަށް ދޫކޮށްފައިވާ ބިންކޮޅެއް އޮތްކަމުގައިވިޔަސް، ގެހެދުމަށްޓަކައި ކުރުމުއްދަތަކަށް ތަނެއްގައި ތިބުމަށް ކުލިދެއްކުމަށްޓަކައި އަޅުގަޑުމެންނަށް އިތުރަށްބޭނުންވި އެއްލައްކަރުފިޔާ ބެންކުން ނުލިބޭނެކަމަށް ބުނުމުން އަޅުގަޑު ހަމަ އަންތަރީސްވިއެވެ. އެކަމާ ހިތްހަމަނުޖެހިގެން ވާހަކަދެއްކުމުން، އެމުވައްޒަފުބުނީ ކިތަންމެހިތްހަމަނުޖެހުނަސް ކުރާނެކަމެއްނެތްކަމާއި އެކަމަކީ މެނެޖްމަންޓުގެ ނިންމުމެއް ކަމަށެވެ. އެހެންވުމުން އެކަމާހިތްހަމަނުޖެހިގެން، ބޭންކްއޮފްމޯލްޑިވްސްގެ ވެބްސައިޓަށްގޮސް އެތަނަށްފޮނުވި ޝަކުވާއަށް އަދި ޖަވާބެއްނުލިބެއެވެ. ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު
އެދުވަހު އަޅުގަޑު ހިތަށްއެރިއެވެ. ވިޔަފާރިވެރިންގެ ގައުމީ ޖަމްއިއްޔާގެ އެގްޒެކެޓިވްކޮމިޓީގައި އަޅުގަޑުވޭތުކުރި ހަތަރުއަހަރު ދުވަހު ދިމާވި ކުދިވިޔަފާރިވެރިންނާއި އަންހެންވިޔަފާރިވެރިން، އެމީހުންގެ ހާލުބަޔާންކުރުމަށް ނުހަނު ހިތްދަތިކަމާއިއެކު ދެއްކިވާހަކަތަކަކީ ތެދުވާހަކަތަކެއްކަން އިތުރަށް ގަބޫލުކުރެވުނެވެ. ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު
އާދެ، ދިވެހިބެންކަކީ ގައުމީބެންކެއް ނޫންކަމެވެ. އެއީ ވަރަށް ފޯކަސްޑް ކޮމާޝަލްބެންކެއްކަމެވެ. އަދި ދިވެހިރާއްޖެއަށް ގައުމީބެންކެއް ބޭނުންވާކަމުގެ ފުންއިހުސާސްކުރެވުނެވެ. މިފިކުރުއިތުރަށް ވަރުގަދަވެގެންދިޔައީ މިއަދުގެ “މިއަދު” ނޫސް ކިޔާލުމުންނެވެ. ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު
 
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Posted by on May 23, 2008 in Development, Economy, Service, Thaana

 

Hiyaavahikamaai Dhivehin….


މިދިޔަ ބުރާސްފަތި ދުވަހުގެ ހަވީރު ނޫހުގެ ފަލަސުރުޚީ، މިއަދު އަނެއްކާވެސް އިތުރަށް ހަނދާނަށް އައެވެ. ކުރީދުވަހުގެ ޚަބަރަކީ، ގައުމީ ހިޔާވަހިކަމާއި ބެހޭ ސިޔާސަތެއް ދިވެހިސަރުކާރުގެ ކެބިނެޓުން ބައްލަވާ ފާސްކުރެއްވި ވާހަކައެވެ. މިހާ ދުވަސްފަހުން، ދިވެހިންނަކީ ބޯހިޔާވަހިކަމުގެ ހައްގު އޮތްބައެއްކަމުގައި އަޅުގަޑުމެންގެ ވެރިން “ފާސްކުރިކަމީ” ވެސް ހާދަ ހެޔޮފުޅު ކަމެކޭ އެދުވަހު ހިތަށް އެރިއެވެ. އެހެންނަމަވެސް، އެއީ އަދި އާންމު ރައްޔިތަކަށް އޭގެ ޒާތުގައި އެއްވެސް ފައިދާއެއް ކުރާނެ ސިޔާސަތެއްކަން ފަހުމުވީ ޚަބަރު ރަގަޅަށް ކިޔާލުމުންނެވެ. އެސިޔާސަތުގެ މުހިންމު ނުގުތާއަކަށް އޮތީ، ހިޔާވަހިކަމާއި ބެހޭ ވުޒާރާއާއި ކަމާބެހޭ އެހެނިހެން ދާއިރާތަކުގައި ފަންނީ އަދި ގާބިލު މީހުން ބިނާކުރުމެވެ. ދިވެހި ދިވެހި ދިވެހި ދިވެހި ދިވެހި ދިވެހި ދިވެހި ދިވެހި ދިވެހި ދިވެހި ދިވެހި ދިވެހި ދިވެހި ދިވެހި
އެހެންކަމުން އަދި ކުރިޔަށް މިއޮތް ފަސްއަހަރެއްހާ ދުވަހު އޮންނާނީ ލޯނު ނެގުމާއި، އޮފީސްތަކުގެ ވެރިންގެ މުސާރަ ބޮޑުކުރުމާއި، ރާއްޖެއިން ބޭރަށް ދަތުރުކުރުމާއި، ޒުލަށް މީހުން ދާހެން މިބޭފުޅުން ރާއްޖެތެރެއަށް ދަތުރުކުރެއްވުމާއި، ރައްޔިތުން އެބޭފުޅުންނަށް މަރުހަބާކިޔާ ޝުކުރު ދެންނެވުމެވެ. ހިޔާވަހިކަމުގެ މާނައަކީ، ބޭނުމަކީ، އަދި އެސިޔާސަތުގެ ސަބަބުން ފަރުދަކަށް ލިބޭނެ ފައިދާއަކީ ކޮބައިކަމެއް އެސިޔާސަތުގައި އޮތްކަމަށް އެޚަބަރަކު ނެތެވެ. އެހެން ހުރި ސިޔާސަތުތައް މިހާރުވެސް ހިރަފުސްއަރައަރާ އެބަހުއްޓެވެ. ދިވެހި ދިވެހި ދިވެހި ދިވެހި ދިވެހި ދިވެހި ދިވެހި ދިވެހި ދިވެހި ދިވެހި ދިވެހި ދިވެހި ދިވެހި ދިވެހި ދިވެހި ދިވެހި
ދެން މިއަދު ހަވީރު ނޫހުގެ އޮންލައިން ބަލާލިއިރު، މިއޮތީ ތިރީސް ރައްޔިތަކު ދިރިއުޅޭ ރަށެއްގެ ވާހަކަ އެވެ. އަދި އެރަށުގެ ސަތާރަ ވަރަކަށް ގޭގައި ދިރިއުޅޭ މީހުން ބަދަލުވުމަށްޓަކައި ސަރުކާރުން އެހެން ރަށެއްގައި ގެދޮރު އަޅާދޭ ވާހަކައެވެ. މިމީހުންނަށް ކޮންމެ ކަމެއްވެސް ކުރަން މިއެގެނީ އެންމެ ޚަރަދުބޮޑުކޮށް އިހުޒަމާނުގެ ބޯދާ ގޮތަށެވެ. ދިވެހި ކޮންމެ ރައްޔިތަކަށް ހިޔާވަހިކަން ހޯދައިދެވިދާނެ ކަމަށް މިމީހުންނަށް ގަބޫލު ނުކުރެވޭތީ ހައިރާންވާކަށް ނުޖެހެއެވެ. މިމީހުން ބޭނުންވަނީ، އެރަށުގެ މީހުންނަށްވެސް ގެރާނާފައި ގޯތި ދޭށެވެ. ކުރިމަގަށް ވިސްނާ ބަޔަކު ކޮންމެ ދެމަރިފިޔަކަށް ގޯތިދޭން ވިސްނާނެ ހެއްޔެވެ؟ ދިވެހި ދިވެހި ދިވެހި ދިވެހި ދިވެހި ދިވެހި ދިވެހި ދިވެހި ދިވެހި ދިވެހި ދިވެހި ދިވެހި ދިވެހި ދިވެހި ދިވެހި ދިވެހި ދިވެހި ދިވެހި
އެހެންޏާ ފަހެ، އެރަށުގައި ދިރިއުޅޭ ސަތާރަ އާއިލާއަށް ހައުސިންގ ސްކީމެއްގެ ދަށުން ފްލެޓު އަޅައިދީގެން މީހުން ދިރިއުޅޭ ރަށަކަށް ބަދަލުކޮށް، ވިޔަފާރިއުސޫލުން ދެކޮޓަރީގެ ފްލެޓަކަށް ދިހައަހަރު ދުވަސްވަންދެން ކުލިދެއްކުމަށް 10 މިލިޔަން ރުފިޔާ ބެންކުގައި ބެހެއްޓުމުން ފުދޭނެއެވެ. އެކަމަކު މިމީހުން އެ ސަތާރަ އާއިލާ ބަދަލު ކުރުމަށް އެތައް ސަތޭކަ މިލިޔަން ރުފިޔާގެ މަޝްރޫއެއް ހިންގާނެއެވެ. މިއީ މިމީހުންގެ ވިސްނުން ހުރިގޮތެވެ. ހަމަރަގަޅަށްވެސް މިވިސްނުމުގައި ރައްޔިތުންނަށް އުޖާލާ ކުރިމަގެއް ހޯދައެއް ނުދެވޭނެއެވެ. ސުވާލަކީ މިމީހުންގެ މިހިރަ ބޯދާ ވިސްނުން ބަދަލު ކުރެވޭނީ ކިހިނަކުން ހެއްޔެވެ؟ ދިވެހި ދިވެހި ދިވެހި ދިވެހި ދިވެހި ދިވެހި ދިވެހި ދިވެހި ދިވެހި ދިވެހި ދިވެހި ދިވެހި ދިވެހި ދި
ދިވެހިންނަށް ބޯހިޔާވަހިކަން ލިބުމުގެ ދުވަސް އޮތީ އަދި ވަރަށް ދުރުގައެވެ. ދިވެހި ދިވެހި ދިވެހި ދިވެހި ދިވެހި ދިވެހި ދިވެހި ދިވެހި ދިވެހި ދިވެހި ދިވެހި ދިވެހި ދިވެހި ދިވެހި ދިވެހި ދިވެހި ވެހި ދިވެހި
 
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Posted by on March 27, 2008 in Development, My Concerns

 

Leaders don't need protection from their people!


This evening we were at dinner with a friend of mine who is a General Manager in one of the leading resorts and one of our agents who is an Indian national resident in Dubai, at Dhonmaniku beside Viyafaariveringe Miskiiy and diagonally opposite to Munavvaru campaing office. We did not, however discuss religion or politics.

One of the discussion topics that was quite interesting was that of Dubai. We were told that the secret behind Dubai was the attitude and foresight of the leader of the emirate. And reminded that Dubai is the only emirate in the United Arab Emirates that did not have oil.

He did believed in creating new challenges and opportunities for his emirate and his people. He had been in defacto charge of Dubai’s direction and fast paced development for at least a decade when he became leader of the emirate in 2006. He has a big heart and last year announced plans to give USD10bn to set up an educational foundation in the Middle East.

Sheikh Mohammed is said to move around by himself without an entourage of body guards to protect him from his people. It was said that once he gave a surprise visit to a municipal office and saw that his people had to bend down to talk to officials inside “protected” by glass barriers and reachable only by a small hole in it. He is said to have asked the municipal officials why they were sitting behind the glass. And he was told that it was for protection from the people. He is said to have asked, “Why do you need protection from the people who pay you to serve them?” He was very unhappy and asked to have the glass walls brought down and made the people to be able to talk to the civil servants in an environment of equals.

The bottomline of the discussion was that Dubai is what it is today and what it will be tomorrow, simply because the leaders (the rulers) can work together to bake the cake rather than fighting for a piece of the cake before its even made. You can make sense of the reality if you just look around.

Sheikh Mohammed declared in 2001: “We must ease the lives of people and businesses interacting with the government and contribute in establishing Dubai as a leading economic hub”

Dhonmaniku is a superb restaurant and they serve fine Thai food.

 
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Posted by on March 24, 2008 in Development, Leadership

 

Plight of those living in Villi-Male'


This morning I took the 3.15am ferry to Villingili, eight minutes from the mainland of Male’. Villi-Male’ as it is popularly known is claimed by the government to be the fifth ward of Male’.

While getting on the ferry I came across a friend who had just come from Colombo with his family, and I helped him to load the luggage to the ferry. And at the Villingili end also helped him to unload the luggage from the ferry. When MTCC started the ferry services, this was voluntarily done by the crew and ferry officers who were on duty. However, as time went by this has become a burden to them and has been given up.

When on Villingili, we checked for an available vehicle (taxi vans) of the three that are allowed to operate on the island. Yet, there was none. And a couple of others and my friend had to drag their luggage all the way to their homes. I could not help wondering the fate of the second class citizens who live on the outskirts of the capital Male’. Ofcourse, we live on Villingili by choice, and it is up to us to face the hardships and the misery associated with it.

We must remind ourselves of how Villi-Male’ was fifteen years ago; and there will be more than enough consolation to any heavy heart. Thank God and thanks to the State!

 
 

Maldives: Towards a New Dawn


ދިވެހިރާއްޖޭގައި ތަރައްގީއަށް ރޭވުމުގެ ފެށުން ކަމުގައި، ރާއްޖޭގެ ޕްލޭނިންގ މިނިސްޓްރީން ފާހަގަކުރަނީ، 1950 ވަނަ އަހަރު ސުމުއްވުލްއަމީރު މުހައްމަދު އަމީން ނެރެދެއްވި ދިވެހިރާއްޖޭގެ ތިން އަހަރުގެ މަޝްރޫއު ނުވަތަ ތްރީ ޔިއަރ ޕްލޭން ފޯރ މޯލްޑިވްސް (1950 ން 1952) އެވެ. ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު
އެއަށްފަހު ދެން ތަރައްގީއަށް ރޭވުމުގެ މަސައްކަތް ފަށާފައިވަނީ ދިވެހިރާއްޖޭގެ ރައީސްކަމަށް އަލްއުސްތާޛު މައުމޫނު އަބްދުލްޤައްޔޫމް ހޮވިވަޑައިގަތުމުން ކަމަށާއި، ދިވެހިރާއްޖޭގައި ފުރަތަމަ އެކުލަވާލި ގައުމީ ތަރައްގީގެ މަޝްރޫއު (1985 – 1987) ތައްޔާރުކުރީ އެމަނިކުފާނުގެ ސަރުކާރުން އުފެއްދެވި މިނިސްޓްރީ އޮފް ޕްލޭނިންގ އެންޑް ޑިވެލޮޕްމަންޓުން 1985 ވަނަ އަހަރު ކަމަށްވެސް ޕްލޭނިންގ މިނިސްޓްރީން ބުނެއެވެ. އަދި ގައުމީ ތަރައްގީގެ ފަސްވަނަ މަޝްރޫއު ނިމުމަކާ ހަމަޔަށް އައިއިރު، ރާއްޖެވަނީ ތަރައްގީގެ އާ ތަސައްވުރަކަށް ބޭނުންވެފައި ކަމަށް ވެއެވެ. ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު
އެހެންކަމުން، 1999 ޖުލައި 26 ގައި ގައުމާ މުހާތަބުކޮށް ދެއްކެވި ވާހަކަފުޅުގައި، އިއްޒަތްތެރި ރައީސުލްޖުމްހޫރިއްޔާ ވަނީ، ރާއްޖޭގެ ވިހިވިހީގެ ތަސައްވުރު އެމަނިކުފާނު ދެކެވަޑައިގަންނަވާގޮތް ހާމަކޮށް ދެއްވާފައެވެ. އޭގައި ބުނެފައިވާކަމަށް އަޅުގަޑު ހަނދާންވަނީ، 2020 ގައި ދިވެހިރާއްޖެއަކީ ކުރިއަރާފައިވާ ގައުމުތަކުގެ މެދުފަންތީގެ ކުރީސަފުރަގައިވާ ގައުމަކަށް ވާނޭ ކަމަށާއި، ކޮންމެ ދިވެހި ރައްޔިތަކީ ގާބިލު ރައްޔިތަކަށް ވާނޭ ކަމަށެވެ. ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު
އަދި އެމަނިކުފާނުގެ މިތަސައްވުރާއި ވިދިގެން އައި ރިއާސީ އިންތިޚާބަށް ތާއީދު ހޯއްދެވުމުގެ މަސައްކަތް، އިންތިޚާބުގެ ދެ އަހަރު ކުރިން ފަށްޓަވާ، ތ. ވޭމަންޑޫގައި ދެއްވި ހުކުރު ހުތުބާގައި ދިވެހި ޒުވާނުންނަކީ ތަންދޮރުދަންނަ ބަޔަކަށް ހެދުމަށް އިލްތިމާސް ކުރެއްވިއެވެ. އަދި 2003 ވަނައަހަރުގެ ރިޔާސީ އިންތިޚާބު ކާމިޔާބު ކުރެއްވުމަށްޓަކައި، ދިވެހިންނަށް އުފާވެރި ކުރިމަގެއް ހޯއްދަވާ ދެއްވުމަށް ވައުދުވެ ވަޑައިގެންނެވިއެވެ. ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު
އެއަހަރު ވެގެންދިޔައީ ދިވެހި ތާރީޚުގައި މިފަހުން ހިނގާދިޔަ އެންމެ ކަޅު ހާދިސާ ހިނގާދިޔަ އަހަރަށެވެ. މާފުށީ ޖަލުގައި އިވާން ނަސީމް މަރުވި ހާދިސާގެ ފަހަތުން މާލޭގައި ހިނގި ހަމަނުޖެހުންތަކުގައި، ދިވެހިރާއްޖޭގެ ހައިކޯޓު ގެ ދިދަބާލާ ހައިކޯޓުގައި ރޯކޮށްލިއެވެ. އެކަމުގައި އިސްވެ ހުންނެވިކަމަށްވެގެން ސަރުކާރުން ޓެރަރިޒަމްގެ ގާނޫނުގެ ދަށުން ދައުވާކުރީ، ރައީސުލްޖުމްހޫރިއްޔާގެ އަނބިކަނބަލުންނަށް ބޮޑުދައިތާފުޅު ވިދާޅުވާ ބޭފުޅަކާއެވެ. ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު
ހަމަނުޖެހުން ބޮޑު ދުވަސްތަކަކަށް ފަހު، 2004 ވަނައަހަރުގެ ފެބްރުއަރީމަހު ރައްޔިތުންމަޖިލިސް ހުޅުއްވަވާ ދެއްވި ރިޔާސީ ބަޔާނުގައި، ދިވެހި ރާއްޖޭގެ ޖުމްހޫރިއްޔާގެ ގާނޫނު އަސާސީ އަނެއްކާވެސް އިސްލާހުކުރެއްވުމަށް ޚާއްޞަމަޖިލިސް އެކުލަވާލައްވާނެ ކަމުގައި އެމަނިކުފާނު އިއުލާނު ކުރެއްވިއެވެ. އަދި އެއަހަރުގެ ޖޫން މަހުގެ ތާރީޚުން ފުރިގެންވީ 9 ވަނަ ދުވަހުގެރޭ އިސްލާމީ މަރުކަޒުގައި ރައްޔިތުންނާއިއެކު ކޮށްލެއްވި “ނުރަސްމީ” ބައްދަލު ކުރެއްވުމެއްގައި، އެމަނިކުފާނުގެ އަމިއްލަފުޅު ހިޔާލު ހިއްސާކޮށްލެއްވިއެވެ. އަދި 51 ނުގުތާގެ މައްޗަށް އެކުލެވިގެންވާ ހުށަހެޅުއްވުމެއް 2005 ގެ ފެބްރުއަރީގައި ރައްޔިތުންގެ މަޖިލީހަށް ހުށަހެޅުއްވިއެވެ. ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު
ދިވެހިރާއްޖޭގެ ދެވަނަ ގައުމީ ތަރައްގީގެ މަޝްރޫއާއިއެކު ވަޒީފާގެ ބާޒާރަށް ނިކުތް، ޒުވާންކަމަށް ބަލާ އުމުރު މިހާރު ފަހަނައަޅާ ގޮސްފައިވާ ދިވެއްސެއްގެ ހައިސިއްޔަތުން، ގާނޫނު އަސާސީ ނުނިމިގެން ނޭވާހޮޅިއަށް އެޅިފައިތިބެ އާ ރިޔާސީ އިންތިޚާބަކާ ކުރިމަތިލާންޖެހޭއިރު، ވަރަށް ފުން އިހްސާސްތަކެއް ކުރެވެއެވެ. ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު
އަޅުގަޑަށް ތަކުރާރުކޮށް ކުރެވޭ ސުވާލަކީ ގާނޫނު އަސާސީ އިސްލާހު ކުރަނީ ކީއްކުރަން ކޮންބޭނުމެއް ހާސިލުކުރަންކަން އަޅުގަޑުމެން އެކަކަށްވެސް ސާފުއިބާރާތުން ބުނަން އެނގޭ ބާވައެވެ. ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު ޝިހާބު
 
Comments Off on Maldives: Towards a New Dawn

Posted by on March 7, 2008 in Democracy nd Reform, Development, My Concerns, Neevey Adu Kon Adu, Presidential Election 2008

 

Maldives: doomed by a poverty mentality


The UAE Interact an Online resource that provide information and news on the UAE has reported:

Masdar City will enjoy a free zone status for renewable energy industry, said Dr Sultan Al Jaber, CEO Abu Dhabi Energy Company (Masdar). At a Press briefing after the groundbreaking ceremony late on Saturday, he said US$22 billion project would provide a launching pad for 1,500 firms involved in innovation, research and development. “The details of the incentives to be offered to the investors in the city would be announced in due course of time,” he said. . Read more here.

While in the Maldives front, Miadhu Daily Online has reported:

The launching of the Fund for Renewable Energy Systems Applications (FRESA) was held in Male’ on January 28. FRESA scheme is an initiative of the Renewable Energy Technology Development and Applications Project (RETDAP), launched in 2004, assisted by Global Environment Facility (GEF) and the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP). The development goal of RETDAP is to reduce the growth rate of GHG emissions from fossil fuel using activities, through the removal of the major barriers to the development and application of renewable energy-based systems that can supplant part of the fossil fuel use in the Maldives.

The FRESA scheme is aimed at contributing towards removing the financial barrier. The scheme, in partnership with the Bank of Maldives, is the first financial mechanism to support renewable energy technology in the country. The RETDAP project will provide the USD 250,000 required in starting up the fund. Read more here.

I was struck by the stark differences in the mindsets of the people responsible for the “development” of the two countries. We are “blessed” with consultants and leaders with “a third world” mentality while Abu Dabi is blessed with entrepeneurs and a leadership of an “abundance” mentality.

 
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Posted by on February 20, 2008 in Development, Neevey Adu Kon Adu

 
 
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