Skip navigation.

exploreopera

| Help

Sign up | Help

News of Maldives

Latest News from Maldives

avatar

Calm waters of the Maldives soothe the soul

, , , ...

By David Belcher / Bend Weekly

With nearly 1,200 islands sprinkled throughout 26 sun-baked atolls in the Indian Ocean, the Maldives are the last great outposts of tropical perfection. Movie stars, beach bums, scuba junkies and Asia- and Caribbean-weary Europeans have been flocking here for the better part of a decade. Americans are just beginning to discover these slice-of-paradise islands southwest of India, so get there fast.

What makes the 17-plus-hour trek worth it? Aren't there equally gorgeous islands located much closer to home? The answer is a definitive "no." These 1,190 islands - 202 of which are inhabited, including 87 exclusive resort islands - are unequaled in untouched splendor. Most of the Maldives are quite small, so guest rooms are often built on stilts over lagoons rich with sea life. The islands are teeming with exotic birds and tropical forests spilling over with plants and flowers.

But what make these islands so unique are the shallow lagoons that ring each island, making swimming, wading or snorkeling virtually perfect. The color of the water varies from lime green to navy blue, depending on how deep the water is. When flying over these majestic islands, the colors are mesmerizing. From the deck of your room or from a sandy shoreline where waves hit the shore at about the speed of a bathtub splash, you can swim, wade and snorkel with sea life painted neon and perfectly reflected in the equatorial sun.

Nowhere is this more evident than in four high-profile resorts, varying from rustic luxury to squeaky clean and mere months old. In a country where tourism is less than 30 years old and has really caught on in the last seven years, the Maldives are a study in grass-roots tourism. This feels like what Hawaii and Southeast Asia must have felt like in the '70s.

The grand dame of the four resorts I stayed at is the 12-year-old Soneva Fushi, located on a vast island of tropical forests where guests ride rickety bikes along shady, sandy roads to their rustic but luxurious bungalows. The first rule when you arrive at the island after a 30-minute seaplane ride from the Male International Airport: "no news, no shoes." Everyone walks barefoot, and the casual, homey approach is evident throughout the resort. Road signs etched on pieces of crooked wood direct you around the island. The beachside bungalows (many of which have private plunge pools) all have vast outdoor bathrooms where water quietly cascades over seven-foot-high walls that ensure privacy. Pools of water catch leaves and buds from towering trees that have grown over the quiet resort with 12 years of overgrowth to give it a genuine, forest-like feeling. Showering or bathing outdoors can include the spotting of fruit bats as they chomp on local berries, or a parakeet-colored gecko that slithers up the side of a wall.

Soneva Fushi's sister resort, Soneva Gili, located on an atoll much nearer the main airport, still offers rustic, cozy luxury, but it celebrates water more than land and forest. On a much smaller island, Soneva Gili's 45 rooms are all over water. The lagoons around the island vary from about one foot to three feet deep, depending on the tide, so wading on the fine, white sand just a few inches below the surface is a dream. The bungalows, open to the elements except for the air-conditioned bedroom, are an interactive experience. The outdoor shower is located at the end of an open-air hallway surrounded by sidewalls for privacy, with views of the azure ocean beyond as its waves crest long before the lagoon that smoothes itself out eight feet below as you shower.

At both Soneva resorts, bicycles are the main way to get around. Each room comes equipped with two rustic bikes. Guests pedal to dinner, spa treatments or scuba diving with the feel of a long-forgotten childhood summer where bicycles and bare feet were a daily routine. Escapism was never more beautiful or transporting.

Less about bare feet and more about refined luxury amid nature are the two Four Seasons resorts. Four Seasons Kuda Huraa, which reopened last September after being severely damaged by the December 2004 tsunami, is virtually a brand-new resort. Three top-notch restaurants offer international, Italian and Indian cuisine. The service is vintage Four Seasons: friendly and attentive.

I completed a beginner's scuba diving course with surprising success. Just a few hundred yards from the resort lies water perfect for the novice diver. Huge schools of neon fish flitted around us just 20 to 30 feet below the water. My instructor, Vlado, was patient, comforting and hugely supportive. And the Four Seasons Explorer, a luxurious catamaran that takes three-day or longer trips out to sea, is the ideal vehicle for more experienced divers wanting to take advantage of the Maldives' famous water.

The brand-new Four Seasons Landaa Giraavaru, with its squeaky-clean guest rooms and private, ornate swimming pools, opened in December and has already drawn some of the world's most glamorous travelers. On a much larger island than its sister property, this Four Seasons boasts a massive infinity swimming pool, seaside rooms with private plunge pools and roomy terraces behind blue gates that evoke a homey and private feeling. And its spa, with massive treatment areas underneath overgrown trees where birds chirp and flowers burst with color, redefines pampering and luxury.

With 87 resorts scattered throughout this massive island chain, and approximately 35 on the way in the next five years, the Maldives are the international hot spot for detachment and raw beauty. These four resorts may be the finest example of how pampering, privacy and sheer natural beauty work perfectly together.

Better make it quick: The Maldives are in their tourism infancy, and seclusion is a fleeting image in our world - even with 1,000 untapped islands to spare.

IF YOU GO

The Soneva Fushi and Soneva Gili resorts are the last word in casual luxury - sort of like Robinson Crusoe meets Mr. and Mrs. Howell - and only now are being discovered by U.S. travelers. The company also has the Six Senses and Evason Hideaway brands, which are known throughout Asia for their spas and originality in design. A highly anticipated third Soneva resort will open in Thailand next year. Visit www.sonevaresorts.com. Call 949-640-1198 or visit www.sixsenses.com.

Four Seasons Kuda Huraa and Four Seasons Landaa Giraavaru, with a branding more familiar to U.S. travelers, offer a typical Four Seasons' approach to hospitality. Less casual and less hands-off than the Soneva brands, these two resorts are new, but with old-fashioned service. And the Four Seasons Explorer is a luxurious boat trip for the water-worshipping masses who come for scuba diving. Visit www.fourseasons.com or call 800-819-5053.

Many airlines fly to the Maldives, but it's a long haul and very expensive. I went with LTU International Airways, a trusted German carrier based in Dusseldorf. The airline flies to JFK, Miami and Fort Meyers, and is about to start service to LAX and Las Vegas. I stopped in Germany on either side of my trip to the Maldives, which helped break up the lengthy ride (it's a 10-hour flight from Dusseldorf to the Maldives). The Dusseldorf airport is located along many of northern Germany's main train routes, so a stopover in Hamburg, Dusseldorf or Cologne is ideal. LTU offers fabulous German efficiency and hospitality (my plane left JFK with only minor delays in an ice storm in March that canceled hundreds of other flights). Round-trip flights from the United States to Male (the main city of the Maldives) can be had for as little as $1,500, which is reasonable for the length of trip and the huge demand for flights. Visit www.ltu.de/docs/us or call 866-266-5588.
avatar

Don’t want to be a girl!

, ,

By: Aishath Shihana (A maldivian Girl's Openion)

“Girls can wear jeans,

And cut their hair short,

Wear shirts and boots,

‘Cause it’s okay to be a boy.

But for a boy to look like a girl is degrading,

‘Cause you think that being a girl is degrading,

But secretly you’d love to know what it’s like,

Wouldn’t you,

What it feels like for a girl!”



—an excerpt from The Cement Garden which appears in the Madonna song, “What It Feels Like for a Girl”



“I am scared for you” my husband uttered the sentence just as I was dozing off.

I shook away the vestiges of sleep and turned to face him. He was looking at me earnestly, like he wanted to say a lot but didn’t have the words.

“Why?”

“Cause you write. I don’t want any mullahs coming after you.” he explained.

“But I don’t write about things like that.” I reassured him.

“Still, you don’t know what they would take offense at. Look at their growing influence. Its everywhere.” he hugged me. “We would leave this country if they ever come to power!”

“Yes, we will,” thinking it was easier said than done.



I had almost forgotten about the late night conversation I had with my husband when it was brought to the forefront of my consciousness with another similar outburst. This time it was from my fifteen year old niece.

“I don’t want to be a girl” she was still in her uniform, having just got back from school.

“Whatever happened that you want to turn in your womanhood?” I couldn’t help asking. My sister shook her head indicating this one was quite a common scenario at her place.

“I hate my friends! I hate my Islam teacher!” more pouting from my niece.

“Ah, the infamous Islam teacher” I laughed.

“Do you know I am the only girl in my class who doesn’t wear the headscarf? Everyone is on my case about it. But I don’t want to wear it!”

“Well, I guess it’s not as simple as that anymore. But until a Taliban-style government comes to power, we have a choice. So no one force you to wear it till then!”

“It’s not just about the headscarf. There are so many things that everyone tells me that I can’t or should not do because I am a girl! I really wish I was a boy, and then I won’t have this problem!”

Did her fifteen-year old logic make sense? Would being a different gender make a difference? Was our problems gender specific? Would it magically disappear if we become the opposite gender? Was my husband’s fear for my safety based solely on the fact that I am a female writer? Was it easier to be a man in Male’? Was it really that dangerous to be a woman? Does the premise that men are from Mars and women are from Venus hold any water in this day and age?

According to the ActionAid International’s report “Violence against women in the post-tsunami context”, violence against women in the post-disaster context has increased and extended beyond the conventional understandings of physical, sexual or emotional violence. If so, we really are losing the battle of the sexes, and desperately need new strategies to find at least an equal footing.

For a very long time, women have been fighting for the same rights that men take for granted. This statement would incur the wrath of many, who claim that since biologically and physically women are different from men, they are thus not equal. However, in all fairness, women are not looking to turn into men, rather that they be given the same consideration and same choices as men by the society. The right to the same education, right to health facilities when they are required and not when a man deems it appropriate, right to free association, right to travel, right to earn and spend money, right to have children when they want, right to play, right to laugh, dance, sing and most importantly right to live!

In a recent interview to TVM, Director General at Ministry of Gender & Family, Ms. Maana Rafiu tried desperately to explain to the public and the interviewer the difference between choice and public perception that was limiting a women’s scope in the society. I applaud her for making that stand. But like many bureaucrats and politicians, she shied away from making bold statements and boggled the audience in rhetoric and waffle! If only she had been concise and straightforward in her facts!

Even though women make over 50% of the society, they make less of an impact on the society than men. There may be more girls than boys in lower secondary schools but there is a disturbing gender gap when it comes to tertiary qualifications. Men edged out women by 45%. Women make only 43% of the workforce. There are only six female MPs in the Parliament.

How many decision-makers are women? How many companies are lead by female CEOs? How many women politicians are there who are bereft of any derogatory labels? Where are the investigative female journalists working for the betterment of the women? Where are the female lawyers who represent the downtrodden wives and single mothers fighting for their children? Where are the female judges and imams, or scholars? In short where are the female role models?

Sure enough, for the first time a Maldivian woman has been honoured as a Woman of Courage by the United States no less. But honestly, did she really deserve to be among all the other amazing women from the rest of the world? Was her contribution to the women’s status in the Maldives noteworthy enough for the US to honour her? How many Maldivian women has benefited from her “cause”? Has any tangible benefits been garnered by the womenfolk cause she “fought” for their rights? Is she truly the Arundathi Roy of Maldives? Or maybe the next Hanan Asrafi or only a shade shy of Condoleeza Rice who bestowed the honour on her? We, Maldivians have just not understood that yet! Us tuna-eating simple folks!

While it is too late to talk about her contribution to Maldivian women, it is completely useless to find a counter-argument from within the Government. The Government has constantly harped on about the importance it attaches to the welfare of women and children and the high priority of widening the role of women in the society and to ensuring women’s rights is upheld. But how many Government offices have daycare services for its female employees? While it is generally considered ok for male employees to take coffee breaks, how many female employees are allowed to go home to send off their children to school or prepare a meal for them?

“It is hard for the Maldivian women to be both! You can’t have a career and be a mother! It’s an either or situation” explained Fathimath Nasheeda. With her second child, Nasheeda had quit her job in the Government to look after her children. “It was too hard. I couldn’t find a nanny to look after my children when I am at work, and I didn’t want to hire a foreign maid. So the only thing I could do was leave my job!”

“We can’t let women go home to cook meals for their children. If they don’t have better time management, maybe they shouldn’t be working in the first place,” said a top management executive, who wished to remain anonymous. “At our firm, we don’t hire women if they have children. Only single girls who are fresh out of school!”

Maybe it was time to talk to my niece about sexual harassment! But that would be adding to her teenage angst, and I was no closer to answers about women’s role in Maldives than I was when I started this deliberation. I have yet to understand my standing in the big picture. Until then I wasn’t the best person to talk to my niece about how her contribution would be accepted by the society, let alone explain to her about a woman’s place in the world!
avatar

Openion

, , ,

Honourable Hooligans?

It is now more than two-and-half years since the incumbent People’s Special Majlis (the legislative body) was convened for the purpose of rewriting a new constitution in the Maldives. The new constitution was to allow multiparty democracy for the first time in the Maldives.

Following President Maumoon Abdul’s announcement to introduce ‘sweeping political reform’ in the Maldives, when the Special Majlis was convened in 2004 the assumption was that the legislatures would be able to finish their work within a year. But it took more than a year to adopt rules governing how to conduct business within the legislative body itself. And now, the integral part of adopting a new constitution is far from being finished.

The government has announced a roadmap aimed at finishing the work of the legislatures but there are genuine concerns whether the new constitution could be adopted before the end of the President’s current term ends in 2008.

The oppositions are blaming the government saying the President has not been honest when he announced the reform agenda. But the government says that they want to adopt the new constitution as soon as possible.

It is no doubt that the government, which also heads the Dhivehi Rayyithunge Party (DRP), has a clear majority in the Special Majlis. And therefore, when the opposition’s claim that the legislatures work has actually been dragged by the government it certainly carries some weight. But in an interview earlier this year, when Maldivian ambassador to UK, Hassan Sabir, issued a stark warning that the country could face chaos unless a multiparty election was held in 2008, he may have actually echoed the government’s position. Hypothetically, the government would want to stretch the whole work of adopting a new constitution until 2008 to avoid an early election and also to win back some of the ground that they have probably lost since the current political process started. But maybe not beyond that because then it would create a whole array of challenges for President Gayoom and his government, both domestically and internationally.

However, the oppositions in Maldives, lead by Maldivian Democratic Party (MDP), could become the real beneficiary if the reform agenda becomes a failure. In theory, MDP too would want to see political reform in Maldives but there are serious doubts whether they would want see these changes taking place under President Gayyoom. Right from the beginning, MDP’s core manifesto has been to drive the President from power. They have always said that President Gayyoom is not an honest man and he should resign immediate. In the past two years, they have tried to stir popular uprisings with the hope of forcing the government to resign. But when none of this was achieved, they began more sinister tactics of disrupting the parliamentary sessions.

DRP may hold a majority in the Special Malis, but the MPs affiliated with the MDP have been responsible for the abrupt end of several of the parliamentary sessions. Some of them are quite notorious for their menacing habit of regularly disrupting the Speaker or the other MPs, leading to the end of the session prematurely. A lot of them are also wannabe politicians and now they seem to grow bolder with each session. Earlier this year, the MPs form Meemu atoll had cursed the Deputy Speaker of the House during one of the session, causing several MPs to walk out in protest.

In the past, whenever a session of the Special Majlis had to be canceled due to poor turn of the members, MPs affiliated with the government were faced with harsh criticism. One of these MPs recently explained his position, saying that it was futile to attend a parliamentary session as long as hooligans were allowed to hijack the sittings. The same MPs also expressed frustration at the Speaker, saying that he has been doing nothing while a small band of people sabotaged the parliament sessions. And according him, the Speaker has full authority to forcefully eject those MPs who disrupt and disobey during a parliamentary session.

With a little over one year left before the incumbent government’s term expires in 2008, perhaps, the best way for the government of President Gayoom to show their commitment for the reform agenda is to allow the Special Majlis to function properly— even if requires ejecting those honourable hooligans from building.
avatar

President inaugurates 2nd National Ten-Year Health Plan

,


MALE, April 9 -- President Maumoon Abdul Gayoom yesterday appealed to all Maldivians to protect their own health and to take all possible measures to prevent illnesses, rather than seeking a cure. He made the appeal while speaking at the official function to mark World Health Day, held at Dharubaaruge. He elaborated that one should always avoid themselves when afflicted with illnesses, and that even the Holy Prophet had advised us on doing so.

The President said that the government had always attached a great importance to the development of the health sector of the country, and avail easy access to health services for citizens. Stressing that seeking health services was not only about treating diseases, the President said that prevention was the best cure.

At the function to mark World Health Day, the President inaugurated the 2nd Ten-Year National Health Plan.

The President also presented the President’s Award for the best performed Regional Hospital and Atoll Hospital in 2005. These Awards were achieved by Hadhunmathi Regional Hospital and South Ari Atoll Hospital, respectively.

The Minister of Health, Ilyas Ibrahim presented the President’s Award for the best performed Health Centre and Health Post in 2005. The Awards were achieved by North Miladhunmadulu Atoll Milandhoo Health Centre and South Ari Atoll Omadhoo Health Post.

Mohamed Ismail Fulhu achieved the President’s Award for the best publication in 2005 produced to increase health awareness.

At the function, the President also launched the MMR Vaccine.

Speaking at the function, Ilyas focused on the developments of the health sector.

The Representative of the World Health Organisation, Dr. J. M. Lunar also spoke at the function. Dr. Naila Firdous explained the advantages and usefulness of the MMR Vaccine.
October 2008
MTWTFSS
September 2008November 2008
12345
6789101112
13141516171819
20212223242526
2728293031