Maldives bans spas after ‘prostitution’ protests

A woman massaging a client's feet/FILE

COLOMBO, Dec 30 – The Maldives has ordered hundreds of luxury hotels to close their spas after protests by an Islamist party which claimed they were a front for prostitution, an official told AFP Friday.

The tourism ministry instructed all resort hotels across the nation’s 1,192 tiny coral islands to shut their spas and health centres offering beauty treatments and massage with immediate effect.

The opposition Adhaalath party, a conservative religious movement whose website features an article criticising “lustful music,” staged protests in the capital Male last week accusing spas of being used as brothels.

“An Islamic party has been agitating against spas hoping to embarrass the government,” a senior government figure told AFP by telephone, confirming Thursday’s ministry order but asking not to be named.

The tourism industry is a vital foreign exchange earner and employer in the Maldives, a popular high-end destination for well-heeled honeymooners and celebrities where luxury rooms can cost up to $12,000 a day.

The Indian Ocean country this year received more than 850,000 tourists, drawn to its secluded islands known for turquoise blue lagoons, as well as corals and reefs filled with multi-coloured fish.

The government bowed to the pressure less than a week after President Mohamed Nasheed called for a “tolerant” form of Islam in his nation of 330,000 people, who by law are all Muslims.

He urged Maldivians to reject religious extremism and support the more liberal “traditional form” of Islam that has been practised in the Maldives for centuries.

Despite the Islamic republic’s reputation as a laid-back holiday paradise, burnished by frequent international marketing campaigns, there is growing concern about the influence of a minority of religious fundamentalists.

There have been anti-semitic protests recently about the transport ministry’s decision to allow direct flights from Israel, while a restaurant that hung up Christmas decorations last year was also targeted.

In 2010, a marriage celebrant was filmed abusing a Western couple as “swine” and “infidels” in a religious-tinged hate speech during a ceremony conducted in the local Dhivehi language.

Most recently, UN Human Rights chief Navi Pillay has sought to highlight the plight of Maldivian women who can be publicly flogged for having extra-marital sex.

Industry sources said they expected the government to revoke the decision on spas considering the huge revenue earned from the business.

The deluxe Huvafen Fushi, where an ocean view room can cost $10,440 per night, told AFP Friday that their spa was open on Friday and they were accepting bookings for the New Year.

“We have heard of this report, but our spa is open,” a Huvafen Fushi manager said. The hotel boasts the world’s first underwater spa treatment rooms where guests have a close up view of marine life.

The government move to shut spas will directly affect an opposition leader, Gasim Ibrahim, head of the Jumhoory Party, who owns five, the independent Minivan news website reported.

AFP

AFP

Agence France-Presse is a global news agency delivering fast, in-depth coverage of the events shaping our world from wars and conflicts to politics, sports, entertainment and the latest breakthroughs in health, science and technology.

  • Janhansun

    The government of Maldives is so hypocritical that it is
    doing something else other than obliging the simple demands of the huge protest
    by the Maldivians. The protest demands were very clear. They are:

    1. To remove all idolatrous monuments in Addu City;

    2. To condemn the speech of Pillay and make public apology;

    3. To cancel all flights of the Israeli National Carrier;

    4. Don’t declare parts of inhabited islands into uninhabited
    islands in order to sell liquour; and

    5. Close down the massage parlours used as brothels in the
    capital Male’.

     

    These were the five demands of the protest. It is important
    to note that it wasn’t a protest of extremists as the government label, but it
    was a protest of more than 100,000 Maldivians (a third of the total population)
    across the country including 10,000 in one rally in the capital, dissatisfied
    and fed-up with the government’s policies including anti-Islamic policies. The also
    include dissatisfaction of the economic policies of the government, which is
    hurting the ordinary people. The proof is the recent resignation of the Finance
    Minister and State Miniter of Finance.

     

    It is important to note that protest demand does
    not include closing spas of luxury resorts nor closing massage parlours in
    general. Also, there was no such demand to stop the sale of alcohol in the
    islands. The demand as you can see above was, Don’t declare parts of inhabited
    islands into uninhabited islands in order to sell liquour; this is about
    inhabited islands not uninhabited islands like tourist resorts. So, it is
    important for the outside world to know, what the government of Maldives is
    doing their own agenda and not the protest demands.