Advertisement

Falah says he’s not running for Deputy Speaker

PNC PG leader Ibrahim Falah (R) walks with President Dr Mohamed Muizzu. (Photo/President's Office)

Ruling People’s National Congress (PNC)’s parliamentary group leader Ibrahim Falah, rumored to be in the one of the front runners in the race for Parliament Deputy Speaker, says he is not contesting for the position.

Dhiggaru MP Ahmed Nazim, once seen as one of the most influential figures within the PNC, announced his resignation from the role of Deputy Speaker at 08:36 am Sunday – less than a half-an-hour ahead of a Parliament sitting on the no-confidence motion against him pushed by his own party.

Sources within the PNC’s parliamentary group told Sun that Falah, along with the parliamentary group’s senior deputy leader Ibrahim Shujau and Mahibadhoo MP Ahmed Thoriq (Tom) were among the top contenders for the role.

But Falah denied the reports in a post on X on Sunday afternoon.

“For the attention of newspapers. I am not running for Parliament’s Deputy Speaker,” wrote Falah on X, sharing a snapshot of Sun’s article.

While Falah has publicly denied contesting for the role, Shujau and Tom have been unresponsive to queries seeking a comment.

The motion against Nazim, endorsed by 73 lawmakers from his party, was filed with the Parliament on May 14. It accuses Nazim of repeatedly abusing his office to create strife and disharmony within the Parliament, but does not mention any specifics.

Nazim described the allegations against him as baseless, but said that he had decided to resign as the motion was endorsed by all members of the ruling party’s parliamentary group – which had elected him  to the role in the first place.

Nazim, who was pulled in late April from key parliamentary committees he sat in, was kicked out at around 06:00 am May 13 from a WhatsApp group for PNC parliamentarians managed by President Dr. Mohamed Muizzu. The party made the decision to remove the Dhiggaru representative from his position as Deputy Speaker during a parliamentary group meeting the same day.

A senior parliamentarian from the party told Sun that Nazim was instructed to resign, and that the party decided to file a no-confidence motion to force him out after he refused.

While the exact reason why PNC turned against Nazim is unclear, former President Mohamed Nasheed recently the party filed the no-confidence motion because he and 23 other parliamentarians from the party planned to cross party lines and submit an impeachment motion against President Muizzu.

However, this claim is denied by the ruling party.

Nasheed also recently claimed that President Muizzu planned to meet Nazim in Singapore during his trip over the Eid holidays. However, the claim was denied by chief government spokesperson Mohamed Hussain Shareef (Mundhu), who maintained that the trip was a private family vacation.

Advertisement
Comment