Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Former Maldives president survives bomb attack

Mohamed Nasheed, the island nation's first democratic­ally elected president and now its parliament­ary speaker, was targeted as he got into his car. Doctors say his injuries are not life threatenin­g.

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Mohamed Nasheed, the 53year-old former president of the Indian Ocean island nation of Maldives, narrowly escaped what is suspected to have been an assassinat­ion attempt in the capital, Male, on Thursday evening.

Nasheed was injured by a bomb rigged to a motorcycle as he was getting into his car. A Maldives government statement said: "Nasheed escaped an assassinat­ion attempt. He is injured but his condition is stable." He is currently being treated at ADK Hospital in Male.

Who is Mohamed Rasheed?

A pro-democracy fighter, Nasheed currently serves as the country's parliament­ary speaker, a position he has held since May 2019. Before that, he became the predominan­tly Sunni Muslim country's first democratic­ally-elected president in 2008, a role he served in until 2012, when he was forced from office in a coup.

Nasheed was subsequent­ly put on trial and sentenced to 13 years in prison on terrorism charges — which were roundly decried by human rights groups as politicall­y motivated. Amnesty Internatio­nal labeled Nasheed a prisoner of conscience.

When Mohamed Nasheed was granted leave from prison for medical treatment he fled the country and went into exile in the UK. He returned to the Maldives in 2018 and was elected speaker of the People's Majlis, the country's second most powerful political position, in 2019.

Maldives — luxury resorts and Islamists

Maldives Foreign Minister Abdullah Shahid took to Twitter to condemn the incident: "Cowardly attacks like these have no place in our society. My thoughts and prayers are with President Rasheed and others injured in this attack, as well as their families.

The 26-island archipelag­o of Maldives is mostly known as a luxury vacation spot but it also has a reputation for political turmoil as well as being a haven for Islamist extremists. Former President Abdullah Yameen, for instance, avoided injury when a bomb went off on his speedboat in 2015, and in 2007, Islamist terrorists targeted foreign tourists, injuring 12 in a bombing in the capital.

 ??  ?? The Maldives are known for luxury tourism but also have a reputation for political turmoil and attracting Islamic terrorists
The Maldives are known for luxury tourism but also have a reputation for political turmoil and attracting Islamic terrorists

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