Maldives President Waheed steps down

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Maldives President Mohamed Waheed on Friday stepped down as president as the country was prepared to hold the second round of the presidential elections.

In a farewell speech, Waheed said one of the priorities during his tenure was to enhance the area of foreign relations, adding that the long-standing non-aligned, independent foreign policy with an Islamic character was changed by the then government.

"Because of this, in global currents, the country's own say was weakened by manifolds. The country was under a position where it could be forced, by changing the Constitution, to do things that its legal framework didn't allow. The government and senior leadership were being asked to resign within few hours, to flout the orders of court, and to stand against those orders," the outgoing president said.

However, he said the government refused to bow down to foreign pressure, but instead upheld the legal framework and the orders of the constitutional institutions of the country.

The second round of the presidential elections will take place on Saturday with the Maldives Democratic Party candidate and former President Mohamed Nasheed being the front runner in the polls.

Meanwhile, addressing a rally of the largest political grouping including Jumhoori Party, formed to lead a coalition at Saturday' s polls, former President Maumoon Abdul Gayoom said if the coalition candidate is elected to office, the government will withdraw its membership from the Commonwealth.

"Times have changed and so has the values to which the commonwealth once ascribed to. Today, the commonwealth is used by larger member nations to bully small nations and uses it as a platform to interfere in the internal politics of smaller and vulnerable member states," he said.