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Jailed Gayoom asks for house arrest over health risk

Jailed former president Maumoon Abdul Gayoom urged the criminal court to consider his health and transfer him to house arrest.

The island nation has been embroiled in fresh political turmoil after the Supreme Court on February 1 ordered the immediate release of jailed political leaders including self-exiled former president Mohamed Nasheed.

President Abdulla Yameen Abdul Gayoom on February 5 had declared state of emergency after his last ditch attempt to convince the top court to revoke the order failed, purged the Supreme Court by arresting two judges and the remaining political leaders and ultimately had the order revoked.

During the preliminary hearing on Sunday, the prosecution read out the charges which said Gayoom had bribed the top court judges to issue the order on February 1 designed to overthrow the government.

The 80 year old had bribed two lawmakers and the former police chief - all now arrested and charged over the coup plot - to aid the government overthrow.

Gayoom told the court that he had already spent 83 days in remand and asked for some leeway over increasing health risk.

Judge Ahmed Hailam denied the request insisting that the court had already offered fair leeway adding that the elder Gayoom had been kept in a custodial jail with better health care facilities as opposed to a remand jail.

Despite a 10 day request, the court had given the former president just two days to appoint an attorney and respond to the charges.

The most high-profile figures remanded until the end of the trial included Gayoom, chief justice Abdulla Saeed and top court judge Ali Hameed - all now formally charged with terrorism over the alleged plot to overthrow the government.

In addition to the terrorism charge, the trio who had been arrested under the state of emergency have also been charged with obstruction of justice over their refusal to handover their mobile phones to the police.

The two top court judges along with now jailed chief judicial administrator Hassan Saeed are also facing bribery charges. Chief justice Saeed is facing a fourth charge of impeding the functioning of the state for allegedly blocking the receipt of three letters sent by president Yameen shortly after the top court ruling on February 1.

Prosecutors have also formally charged four opposition lawmakers over the alleged coup plot.

Gayoom's lawmaker son Faris Maumoon, Jumhoory Party (JP) deputy leader Abdulla Riyaz, Dhangethi lawmaker Ilham Ahmed and South-Machchangoalhi lawmaker Abdulla Sinan have all been charged with terrorism for conspiring to overthrow the government. All four lawmakers have also been remanded until the trial ends.

In addition, former police chief Ahmed Areef has also been charged and remanded until sentencing.

PG office said Areef had handpicked certain police officers in violation of normal procedure to enforce the Supreme Court order and also attempted to disrupt the peace of the country.