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WED · 2026-05-13 · 11:54 GMTBRIEF NSR-2026-0513-75875
News/Maldives jails two journalists for reporting on president’s …
NSR-2026-0513-75875News Report·EN·Human Rights

Maldives jails two journalists for reporting on president’s alleged affair

Two journalists in the Maldives, Mohamed Shahzan and Leevan Ali Nasir, have been sentenced to jail for violating a gag order. Shahzan received 15 days and Nasir 10 days for their reporting on a documentary alleging an affair between President Mohamed Muizzu and a former aide.

Al Jazeera StaffAl JazeeraFiled 2026-05-13 · 11:54 GMTLean · CenterRead · 4 min
Maldives jails two journalists for reporting on president’s alleged affair
Al JazeeraFIG 01
Reading time
4min
Word count
826words
Sources cited
4cited
Entities identified
10entities
Quality score
100%
§ 01

Briefing Summary

AI-generated
NEWSAR · AI

Two journalists in the Maldives, Mohamed Shahzan and Leevan Ali Nasir, have been sentenced to jail for violating a gag order. Shahzan received 15 days and Nasir 10 days for their reporting on a documentary alleging an affair between President Mohamed Muizzu and a former aide. The documentary, released in March, featured an anonymized interview claiming a sexual relationship with the president. The journalists, working for the news website Adhadhu, were jailed after questioning the president and reporting on the gag order itself, which was issued by the criminal court in the capital, Male. Rights groups have condemned the sentences, calling them an attack on free press, while the president's spokesperson rejected the criticism as politically motivated.

Confidence 0.90Sources 4Claims 5Entities 10
§ 02

Article analysis

Model · rule-based
Framing
Human Rights
Legal & Judicial
Tone
Mixed Tone
AI-assessed
CalmNeutralAlarmist
Factuality
0.70 / 1.00
Factual
LowHigh
Sources cited
4
Well sourced
FewMany
§ 03

Key claims

5 extracted
01

President Muizzu has dismissed the allegations as 'baseless lies'.

quoteMohamed Muizzu
Confidence
1.00
02

The case centers on a documentary titled Aisha, which alleged an affair between President Mohamed Muizzu and a former aide.

factualAdhadhu
Confidence
1.00
03

The International Federation of Journalists and the Committee to Protect Journalists condemned the jailing of the journalists.

factualInternational Federation of Journalists, Committee to Protect Journalists
Confidence
1.00
04

Maldives journalists Mohamed Shahzan and Leevan Ali Nasir were sentenced to jail for violating a gag order on allegations against President Mohamed Muizzu.

factualMaldives Journalist Association
Confidence
1.00
05

Adhadhu stated the trials were conducted in secret, concluding within hours with journalists having limited time to find legal counsel.

factualAdhadhu
Confidence
0.90
§ 04

Full report

4 min read · 826 words
Rights groups condemn jailing of journalists for violating a gag order on allegations against President Mohamed Muizzu.Maldives journalists Mohamed Shahzan and Leevan Ali Nasir were sentenced to 15 and 10 days in jail respectively [Courtesy of Maldives-journalist-association" class="entity-link entity-organization" data-entity-id="126319" data-entity-type="organization">Maldives Journalist Association]Published On 13 May 2026Groups advocating for freedom of the news media have called for the release of two journalists who have been jailed in the Maldives for violating a gag order banning public discussion of a documentary alleging an affair between President Mohamed Muizzu and a former aide.The International Federation of Journalists on Wednesday “strongly condemned” the jailing of Mohamed Shahzan and Leevan Ali Nasir while the Committee to Protect Journalists described their sentences as a “punitive attempt to criminalise investigative journalism”.Recommended Stories list of 4 itemslist 1 of 4‘Supercharged’ donations: How far-right Reform UK built a global networklist 2 of 4Maldives police raid news outlet over report alleging president’s affairlist 3 of 4Pakistan withdraws from regional women’s football tournament in Indialist 4 of 4Sri Lanka braces for new economic crisis as war on Iran continuesend of listThe journalists, who work for the news website Adhadhu, were sentenced by the criminal court in the Maldivian capital, Male, on Tuesday.Shahzan received 15 days in jail and Nasir 10 days.Muizzu’s spokesperson, Mohamed Hussain Shareef, rejected the criticism, saying any “attempts at portraying the criminal proceedings as an attack on free press are unwarranted and politically motivated.”The case centres on a documentary titled Aisha, which was released on Adhadhu’s social media accounts on March 28. It featured an anonymised interview with a woman who claimed to have had a sexual relationship with Muizzu, 47, a married father of three.Muizzu has dismissed the allegations as “baseless lies”.Police raided Adhadhu’s offices in April over the documentary’s release, seizing the laptops of journalists, marketing staff and administrators along with hard drives and pen drives.According to Adhadhu, Shahzan was jailed after questioning Muizzu about late-night calls he had allegedly made to the former presidential aide. Nasir was jailed for reporting on the gag order itself, which the criminal court issued on Monday at the request of prosecutors.The order, published on the court’s website, bans any direct or indirect discussion of the allegations, the charges and the ongoing trials, citing constitutional provisions protecting the right to reputation.Adhadhu said the trials were conducted in secret and concluded within hours with the journalists given just two hours to find legal counsel and no opportunity to present a defence. “For the first time in our democratic history, journalists have been jailed for challenging the most powerful man in the nation,” the outlet said.The case has intensified concerns about democracy and media freedom in the Maldives, a Sunni Muslim nation whose luxury resorts attract tourists from around the world. Parliament passed a media law in September giving a commission stacked with government loyalists powers to fine, suspend and shut down outlets while Muizzu’s allies overhauled the Supreme Court last year, removing three judges in moves the former judges said were politically motivated.The government denied the allegations.The Aisha documentary was released days before a constitutional referendum that delivered a stinging midterm rebuke to Muizzu, with 69 percent of voters rejecting a government proposal on April 4 to align the presidential and parliamentary election cycles.Critics said the plan would undermine checks and balances in the country.Editors on trialTwo editors at Adhadhu, Hussain Fiyaz Moosa and Hassan Mohamed, also face charges of “qazf”, the false accusation of adultery or unlawful sexual intercourse under Islamic law, which carries a prison sentence of up to one year and seven months and up to 80 lashes.Their trial began behind closed doors in Male on Wednesday.Police have also launched an investigation into a former presidential office staffer, Aishath Easha Ashraf, in connection with the documentary.Shareef, Muizzu’s spokesperson, denied that the prosecutions amounted to an attack on freedom of the news media, saying the cases were “not in any way related to the guaranteed legal rights and responsibilities of independent journalism”.He said Muizzu had given the media unprecedented access and welcomed scrutiny of his policies. “We strongly believe that a responsible, vibrant and free press is a cornerstone of our democracy,” he said.News media freedom groups, opposition leaders and legal experts disagreed.The Committee to Protect Journalists urged authorities to release Shahzan and Nasir and “end judicial harassment of their news outlet”.The Maldives Journalists Association called the sentences “unprecedented in the Maldives’s democratic history” and argued that the court’s gag order failed the constitutional tests of legality, necessity and proportionality.It said the government’s action against the news media “clearly signals the back sliding of democratic rights” under Muizzu’s government.Former President Ibrahim Mohamed Solih, whose opposition Maldivian Democratic Party is aligned with Adhadhu, said the jailing “marks another shameful chapter in the government’s attempt to intimidate the press and silence public dissent”.Former Supreme Court Judge Husnu Al Suood also criticised the imprisonment.In a post on X, he said it “undermined the principles of press freedom, accountability, and democratic transparency”.
§ 05

Entities

10 identified
§ 06

Keywords & salience

8 terms
journalists jailed
1.00
freedom of the press
1.00
gag order
0.90
investigative journalism
0.80
president mohamed muizzu
0.70
maldives
0.60
criminal proceedings
0.50
allegations
0.40
§ 07

Topic connections

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