Campaign Posters Fade While Fishing Boats Still Rot
Politics ·
The sea has a way of revealing what lies beneath the surface. In these islands, we watch the tides of politics rise and fall, carrying with them the debris of broken promises. What begins as a movement against injustice slowly transforms, the ideals fading like paint on a fishing boat left too long in the sun.
They speak of unlimited power vested in single positions, of pardons granted to those who evade their responsibilities while ordinary citizens struggle beneath the weight of rising costs. The system bloats with appointments that serve political masters rather than public need, creating a sea of positions where work is scarce but loyalty is currency.
On these crowded islands, we witness how housing becomes political currency, how subsidized homes meant for struggling families become assets for those already comfortable abroad. The discrimination isn't always in the laws themselves, but in their application—who benefits, who gets overlooked, whose voice is silenced when they speak against the establishment.
The corruption isn't always in grand thefts, but in the quiet erosion of principles. What begins as a fight for justice becomes about maintaining power, about party loyalty over public service. The same patterns repeat, the same mistakes made by different faces, while the people watch from the sidelines, their trust dissolving like salt in water.
Yet in the spaces between political battles, life continues. Fishermen still mend their nets as dawn breaks over the Indian Ocean. Families gather for evening tea, discussing the day's struggles—the medicine shortages, the jobs that never materialize for their educated children, the feeling of being strangers in their own crowded capital.
There's a weariness that settles in when hope becomes a commodity traded for votes. When the language of change becomes just another campaign slogan, and the machinery of governance serves only itself. But the ocean teaches patience, and perhaps that is what we need most—the patience to believe that clearer waters will eventually wash away what cannot endure.
— Source fragments: Major reason for excessive corruption is the unlimited power vested in the President; So true, MDP is all abt corruption and laadheeny now. At the start it was more against injustice; Any Male' supremacist will block you when you go against the establishment; If re-elected, he will repeat these same mistakes for sure; This is the reason why we need a two-tire system like in the US