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Govt Lifts Ban on Spas in Tourist Resorts and Hotels
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Abdul Latheef
The government yesterday lifted the nationwide ban on spas and massage parlors, revoking a circular sent by the Tourism Ministry last week which ordered spas to cease operations.
Speaking to reporters this afternoon during a press conference held at Kurumba Maldives resort – the country’s first resort, which began operations in 1972 – the President said that the government has requested the Supreme Court to advise whether spas are legal under the Maldives constitution.
The President said he has ordered to lift the ban on spas with immediate effect, while the country awaits the Supreme Court’s verdict.
The government’s actions over the past few days follow an opposition rally in Male’ on 23 December aimed at “defending Islam”. During that rally, all the major opposition parties in the country attacked the government’s religious credentials; many speakers went further, calling for the creation of an ‘Islamic state’ with the strict imposition of Sharia.
Following the rally, the government ordered the country’s spas closed.
Since the government’s ban on spas, the opposition parties – most of which are headed or heavily influenced by resort owners – quickly changed their positions and stated they do not support a ban on spas nor wish to damage the tourism industry.
“We wanted to impress upon everyone where the opposition’s demands were ultimately going to end,” the President explained on Wednesday.
The President said the government’s ultimatum “woke the nation from its slumber and sparked a healthy national debate about the future direction of the country.”
“The extremist demonstration on 23 December attracted a sizeable crowd. But their radical demands awoke the silent majority who categorically reject extremism,” the President said.
Meanwhile, according to the opposition parties government’s earlier move was aimed at leisure business owned by some opposition members.
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