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PoliticsAsia

Maldives police arrest 'key suspect' in bomb attack

May 9, 2021

Security forces say they're holding the third suspect in the attack that critically wounded former President Mohamed Nasheed.

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Police cordoned off the area where the former Maldives leader was injured in a bomb blast in Male.
Police are still searching for a fourth suspect Image: Mohamed Sharuhaan/AP/picture alliance

Maldives police on Sunday said they have arrested the prime suspect in the explosion that targeted the country's former president.

The blast on Thursday night outside former President Mohamed Nasheed's home in the capital city of Male left him in a critical condition.

Police say they now have in their custody three of the four suspects involved in the explosion, blamed on Islamic extremists.

Police did not provide further details on the suspect but appealed for more information about another man seen in the area of the attack. 

What is Nasheed's condition?

Hospital officials said the 53-year-old ex-president remains in an intensive care unit after surgeries to his head, chest, abdomen and limbs.

Family members said Nasheed was able to speak to close relatives after no longer needing life support.

The ex-president, now the parliament's speaker, underwent 16 hours of surgery to remove shrapnel from his body. Doctors said shrapnel damaged his intestines and liver, and one shard narrowly missed his heart. 

Nasheed became the first democratically-elected president in 2008, ending decades of one-party rule in the Maldives. He was toppled in a military-backed coup in 2012.

Former President Mohamed Nasheed waves
Nasheed is currently the speaker of parliamentImage: Getty Images/AFP/A. Shurau

He is known internationally as a champion in the fight against climate change and an outspoken critic of religious extremism in the predominantly Sunni Muslim nation.

What do we know about the attack?

The bomb was planted on a motorcycle parked by Nasheed's house. It exploded as he walked to his car.

Police arrested the owner of the motorcycle and another man on Saturday.

Two of Nasheed's bodyguards and two bystanders, including a British citizen, were also wounded.

Police officers inspect the area after the blast
Officials blamed Islamic extremists for the attackImage: Maldives Police Service/REUTERS

Prosecutor General Hussain Shameem said on Saturday that investigators did not know which Islamist group was responsible.

But officials from Nasheed's Maldivian Democratic Party (MDP) claim that religious extremists and political interests motivated the attack.

Officers from the Australian Federal Police were assisting with the investigation, following a request from the Maldives, according to the Associated Press. A British investigator was also expected to help with the probe. 

The Indian Ocean archipelago of 340,000 people has one of the highest per-capita numbers of militants who fought in Syria and Iraq alongside the "Islamic State" (IS) armed group. 

fb/mm (AFP, AP)