Four Members Appointed to Maldives Media Commission Without Election

Four Members Appointed to Maldives Media Commission Without Election

Four members of the newly established Media and Broadcasting Commission have been appointed without a formal election, raising questions about the transparency of the process. The commission, set up to regulate media across the Maldives, is intended to have seven members in total.

The Elections Commission (EC) announced that the required number of candidates for both broadcasting and online media categories matched the available seats. In the broadcasting category, one candidate withdrew their nomination ahead of Saturday’s scheduled election, leaving the remaining candidates elected unopposed.

The members who have now secured their positions are:

Broadcasting Category

  • Abdul Azeez Ibrahim, Moonimaage / Sh. Feydhoo

  • Zam’ath Ahmed Waheed, Mala / GDh. Thinadhoo

Online Media Category

  • Simaha Naseem, Valleyge / GDh. Rathafandhoo

  • Hussain Sageef, Hisan / HDh. Vaikaradhoo

Zam’ath Ahmed Waheed brings extensive experience to the commission, holding a master’s degree in journalism and years of work in television. He previously served on the now-abolished Broadcasting Commission under the former regulatory framework.

Simaha Naseem has built a long-standing career in online journalism, while Hussain Sageef served as chairman of the last dissolved Media Council. Their appointments underscore the commission’s mix of seasoned professionals across different media platforms.

The remaining three seats on the seven-member commission will be filled through parliamentary selection. This has sparked debate among media professionals, who have voiced concerns over government influence on the commission.

Journalists have expressed that allowing Parliament to appoint—and potentially remove—all members could compromise the independence of media regulation. The creation of the Media Commission itself followed protests against the enabling legislation, which critics say increases government oversight of journalism.

The establishment of the Media Commission comes amid broader unease in the media community. Journalists argue that a commission heavily influenced by Parliament risks limiting free reporting and editorial independence.

With only four of the seven members now in place, questions remain about how the commission will operate and whether it will address concerns about transparency, accountability, and press freedom in the Maldives.


ބްރޯޑްކާސްޓިން އަދި މީޑިއާ ރެގިއުލޭޓްކުރުމަށް އުފައްދާ މީޑިއާ އެންޑް ބްރޯޑްކާސްޓިން ކޮމިޝަންގެ މެންބަރުންގެ ތެރެއިން މީޑިއާތައް ތަމްސީލުކުރާ ހަތަރު މެންބަރުން، އިންތިޚާބަކާ ނުލައި ހޮވިއްޖެއެވެ.

އިލެކްޝަންސް ކޮމިޝަން (އީސީ) އިން ބުނިގޮތުގައި، މި މަޤާމުތަކަށް ކުރިމަތިލީ ޝަރުޠު ހަމަވާ ކެންޑިޑޭޓުންގެ ޢަދަދު، އިންތިޚާބުކުރަންޖެހޭ ޢަދަދާ (ހަތަރަކާ) އެއްވަރުވުމުގެ ސަބަބުން، ވޯޓެއް ނުބާއްވައި އެމީހުން ވަނީ ހޮވާފައެވެ. އެގޮތުން، ބްރޯޑްކާސްޓަރުން ތަމްސީލުކުރާ ދެ މަޤާމަށް ދެ ކެންޑިޑޭޓުންނާއި، އެހެން މީޑިއާތައް ތަމްސީލުކުރާ ދެ މަޤާމަށް ދެ ކެންޑިޑޭޓުން ޝަރުޠު ހަމަވިއެވެ.

ހޮވުނު މެންބަރުން:

  • ބްރޯޑްކާސްޓިން ކެޓަގަރީ:
    • އަބްދުލްއަޒީޒް އިބްރާހީމް
    • ޒަމްއަތު އަހުމަދު ވަހީދު (ކުރިން ބްރޯޑްކާސްޓިން ކޮމިޝަންގެ މެންބަރު، ނޫސްވެރިކަމުން މާސްޓާޒް ޑިގްރީ ޙާޞިލްކުރައްވާފައި)
  • އޮންލައިން ކެޓަގަރީ:
    • ސިމާހާ ނަސީމް (އޮންލައިން މީޑިއާގެ ތަޖުރިބާ ހުރި ނޫސްވެރިއެއް)
    • ހުސައިން ސަގީފް (އުވާލި މީޑިއާ ކައުންސިލްގެ ރައީސް)

މި ކޮމިޝަނަކީ ފުލްޓައިމްކޮށް މަސައްކަތްކުރަންޖެހޭ ހަތް މެންބަރުންގެ ކޮމިޝަނެކެވެ. މީގެ ތެރެއިން ބާކީ މެންބަރުން ރައްޔިތުންގެ މަޖިލީހުން ހޮވަން ޖެހެއެވެ.

މި ކޮމިޝަން އުފެއްދުމުގެ މަސައްކަތް ކުރިއަށްދަނީ، މި ގާނޫނާ ދެކޮޅަށް ނޫސްވެރިންގެ ބޮޑެތި ކަންބޮޑުވުންތައް ހުރި އިރުގައެވެ. ނޫސްވެރިން ކަންބޮޑުވާ މައިގަނޑު ކަމަކީ:

  1. ސަރުކާރުގެ ނިޒާމުގެ ތެރެއިން ނޫސްވެރިން ރެގިއުލޭޓް ކުރެވޭ ގޮތަށް އޮތުން.
  2. މަޖިލީހުން ތިން ބޭފުޅަކު ކޮމިޝަނަށް ޢައްޔަންކުރުން.
  3. ކޮމިޝަންގެ ހުރިހާ މެންބަރުންނަށް ވެސް ރައްޔިތުންގެ މަޖިލީހުން ވަކިކުރެވޭ ގޮތަށް އޮތުން.

 

Previous Post Next Post