http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2008/nov/10/maldives-climate-change


Paradise almost lost: Maldives seek to buy a new homeland

Maldives The highest land point on the Maldives is only 2.4 metres
above sea level. Photograph: Corbis/Craig Tuttle

The Maldives will begin to divert a portion of the country's
billion-dollar annual tourist revenue into buying a new homeland - as
an insurance policy against climate change that threatens to turn the
300,000 islanders into environmental refugees, the country's first
democratically elected president has told the Guardian.

Mohamed Nasheed, who takes power officially tomorrow in the island's
capital, Male, said the chain of 1,200 island and coral atolls dotted
500 miles from the tip of India is likely to disappear under the waves
if the current pace of climate change continues to raise sea levels.

The UN forecasts that the seas are likely to rise by up to 59cm by
2100, due to global warming. Most parts of the Maldives are just 1.5m
above water. The president said even a "small rise" in sea levels
would inundate large parts of the archipelago.

"We can do nothing to stop climate change on our own and so we have to
buy land elsewhere. It's an insurance policy for the worst possible
outcome. After all, the Israelis [began by buying] land in Palestine,"
said Nasheed, also known as Anni.

The president, a human rights activist who swept to power in elections
last month after ousting Maumoon Abdul Gayoom, the man who once
imprisoned him, said he had already broached the idea with a number of
countries and found them to be "receptive".
Randeep Ramesh discusses the radical ideas of the first democratically
elected president of the Maldives
Link to this audio

He said Sri Lanka and India were targets because they had similar
cultures, cuisines and climates. Australia was also being considered
because of the amount of unoccupied land available.

"We do not want to leave the Maldives, but we also do not want to be
climate refugees living in tents for decades," he said.

Environmentalists say the issue raises the question of what rights
citizens have if their homeland no longer exists. "It's an
unprecedented wake-up call," said Tom Picken, head of international
climate change at Friends of the Earth. "The Maldives is left to fend
for itself. It is a victim of climate change caused by rich
countries."

Nasheed said he intended to create a "sovereign wealth fund" from the
dollars generated by "importing tourists", in the way that Arab states
have done by "exporting oil". "Kuwait might invest in companies; we
will invest in land."

The 41-year-old is a rising star in Asia, where he has been compared
to Nelson Mandela. Before taking office the new president asked
Maldivians to move forward without rancour or retribution - an
astonishing call, given that Nasheed had gone to jail 23 times, been
tortured and spent 18 months in solitary confinement.

"We have the latitude to remove anyone from government and prosecute
them. But I have forgiven my jailers, the torturers. They were
following orders ... I ask people to follow my example and leave
Gayoom to grow old here," he said.

The Maldives is one of the few Muslim nations to make a relatively
peaceful transition from autocracy to democracy. The Gayoom
"sultanate" was an iron-fisted regime that ran the police, army and
courts, and which banned rival parties.

Public flogging, banishment to island gulags and torture were
routinely used to suppress dissent and the fledging pro-democracy
movement. Gayoom was "elected" president six times in 30 years - but
never faced an opponent. However, public pressure grew and last year
he conceded that democracy was inevitable.

Upmarket tourism had become a prop for the dictatorial regime.
Gayoom's Maldives became the richest country in South Asia, with
average incomes reaching $4,600 a year. But the wealth created was
skimmed off by cronies - leaving a yawning gap between rich and poor.
Speedboats and yachts of local multimillionaires bob in the lagoon of
the capital's harbour, while official figures show almost half of
Maldivians earn less than a dollar a day.

Male is the world's most densely populated town: 100,000 people cram
into two square kilometres. "We have unemployment at 20%. Heroin has
become a serious social issue, with crime rising," Nasheed said,
adding that the extra social spending he pledged would cost an
immediate $243m. He said that without an emergency bailout from the
international community, the future of the Maldives as a democracy
would be in doubt.

To raise cash, his government will sell off state assets, reduce the
cabinet and turn the presidential palace into the country's first
university.

"It's desperate. We are a 100% Islamic country and democracy came from
within. Do you want to lose that because we were denied the money to
deal with the poverty created by the dictatorship?" he said.
At a glance

• The highest land point in the Maldives is 2.4 metres above sea
level, on Wilingili island in the Addu Atoll

• The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change predicts that sea
levels could rise by 25-58cm by 2100

• The country comprises 1,192 islands grouped around 26 Indian Ocean
atolls. Only 250 islands are inhabited. The population is 380,000

• The main income is from tourism, with 467,154 people visiting in 2006


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