The Geneva Summit for Human Rights and Democracy annually awards prizes for prominent activists for human rights and democracy. This year's award for women's rights was given to the Iraqi Shirin, a freed Yazidi who was made sex slave of the so-called Islamic State, and the Courage Award on Democracy went to Mohamed Nasheed, former president of the Maldives, a small Asian island state with 400,000 population. The democratically-elected but ousted Maldives president was one of the strong voices against the growth of authoritarianism in the world today.
Speaking at the Geneva Summit on 21 February 2017, Mr. Nasheed, who spent half of his adult life in prisons, witnessed that repressive regimes "are not torturing you for the information. . . They are torturing you to erase you, to get you to capitulate, to get you to surrender.."
He also added: “I always say and always still believe that it is possible to topple a dictator, but it is not so easy to uproot a dictatorship..It’s tentacles go very deep into the roots of society..."
Reprinted below are excerpts from his moving speech.
On being a political dissident in the Maldives:
“I have spent the good half of my adult life in prison. I lost my youth to chains; to incarcerations; to banishments; to torture; to abuse. I started my adult life as a journalist. . . That was in 1989.”
On being imprisoned and tortured:
“I remember that night [when I was first arrested], 270 of us [journalists] were arrested. I was held in solitary confinement for 18 months. I was beaten. I have been spat on, urinated upon. I was kept in stocks, held in chains and brutalized . . .”
“I was released just before I completed my sentence. But then, again, I was silly, so I wrote again, and they arrested me again. This went on and on. . . Every time they would release me and I would write again. I wrote for all sorts of newspapers. . . But with every news article, even when it was on the environment, I would be arrested.”
On leading the campaign to bring democracy to the Maldives:
“One night, a young boy of 19 was murdered in jail and I was having a cup of tea with a doctor. And the chief of police rang this doctor and wanted a death certificate on the boy. So, of course, I got livid. The doctor agreed that he would not sign the death certificate until the boy was brought to the hospital. That sparked a riot in Male. That set in motion a whole train of events that would finally deliver democracy to the Maldives. .”
“We had our first multiparty elections in 2008 and I was fortunate to have won those elections. I became the president and we started running a government, running a country. . . Although we were able to topple a dictator . . . It is not very easy to uproot a dictatorship. It’s tentacles go very deep into the roots of society. Those favorable to the previous regime fomented a coup and I was deposed.”
“After that, we started again advocating for free and fair elections. . . We had the first election, where I won . . . then, they nullified that result and then they had another round of elections, and then we won again and they nullified it again, as many rounds as it took for them to win. . .”
“I will go back to the Maldives again. I will go back to jail again. . . I have decided never ever to give up and we will continue this fight.”
On political prisoners in the Maldives:
“We have more than 1,700 dissidents under one form of another of incarceration [in the Maldives].”
At UN Opening Event, Feb. 20, 2017: