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MALE, Maldives Voters in the Maldives will choose between their first
democratically elected leader and the longtime autocrat's brother in a presidential
runoff on Saturday that comes amid international concerns that the tiny
archipelago nation may slip back to autocratic rule after a long delay
in the election.Mohamed Nasheed, who was elected president in the country's
first multiparty election in 2008, is favored to win having polled nearly
47 percent in the Nov. 9 first round. His failure to get
at least 50 percent for an outright win required a runoff against
Yaamin Abdul Gayoom, a brother of Maldives' 30-year autocratic ruler Maumoon
Abdul Gayoom.The election is expected to be a close contest with Yaamin,
who received 30 percent of first-round votes, courting the support of third-placed
candidate, tourist resort owner Qasim Ibrahim, who received 23 percent.Maldives
is under scrutiny after failing to elect a president in three attempts
since September and after incumbent President Mohamed Waheed Hassan extended
his term in office by six days purportedly to avoid a constitutional
void because the country is past a legal deadline to elect a
new president.Some voters appeared to have run out of patience."We are fed
up with politics. It has slowed our life. There is no business
anymore," said Abdullah Abeedh, a 25-year-old photographer. "We want this
election process to end Saturday and the president to be elected," he
said, adding a l
emergency call was legitimate. The Miami-Dade Police Department sent homicide
detectives to the airport to further investigate, said spokesman Javier
Baez. Police have not indicated any evidence of foul play, however."We're
still gathering as many facts as we can," Baez said.The Coast Guard
had a small boat and a helicopter involved in the search, but
Petty Officer Jon-Paul Rios said they stopped searching about 7 p.m. when
it got too dark.The fire rescue agency had three marine units and
two aircraft, said Lt. Arnold Piedrahita, a fire rescue spokesman. It wasn't
immediately clear whether they were still searching or when they planned
to stop for the night.According to an email from FAA spokeswoman Bergen,
the pilot radioed air traffic controllers at Miami Terminal Radar Approach
Control, which provides radar for flights within a 55-mile radius of Miami
International Airport. The control center then notified the Coast Guard.Bergen
said in an email late Thursday that she had no new information.
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