Otherwise, they all would accept investments from wherever they came, and under whatever terms that the investor insisted upon, as long as such investments could show up development before the eyes of their contemporary, aspirational generation, and (more) money in their hands. India has been slow on this front, and the Indian Establishment is seen as being slower in implementing the commitments in this regard, made by the political leadership. The experience, they say, is that unless their own political leadership takes it up with the Indian counterpart at the highest levels, and at every turn, nothing moves, nothing moves faster and continuously. As they also point out, most such nation do not have the kind of natural resources that the investor expect, so whatever they have they are ready to ‘pledge’. In the case of Maldives, from the days of President Gayoom, and possibly from the days immediately before him under predecessor Ibrahim Nasir, they had only islets to let off to willing investors, to build high-end resorts, but with long-term commitments on both sides in terms of lease-period, and also with freedom for the investor to repatriate profits in dollar-terms, unquestioned.