Eastern Eye (UK)

Third suspect held over Maldives ex-president assassinat­ion attempt

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THE Maldivian police last Sunday (9) arrested a third suspect in the attempted assassinat­ion of former president Mohamed Nasheed (left), officials said as a manhunt continued for others who may have been involved.

The 53-year-old democracy pioneer and climate activist was seriously hurt after a bomb attack in the capital Male last Thursday (6) night that also injured a British national and two others. Police blamed the attack on “religious extremists” while doctors noted that the explosive device had been packed with ball bearings to cause maximum damage.

“We can confirm that a third individual has been arrested in connection with the May 6 attack early today,” police said in a statement.

They identified him as Adhuham Ahmed Rasheed, 25, from the islet of Thinadoo in the Vaavu atoll, about 75 km south of Male. He was arrested at dawn last Sunday after police scoured CCTV footage on the archipelag­o’s two-squarekilo­metre capital island.

Official sources said they believed Rasheed may have detonated the explosive device using a remote control.

Police also released CCTV footage showing him waiting at a narrow alley as Nasheed and his bodyguards walked by to a waiting car. The bomb, rigged to a parked motorcycle, was detonated as Nasheed was about to get into the vehicle. The other two suspects in custody were Mujaz Ahmed, 21, and Thahmeen Ahmed, 32, who were both arrested last Saturday. Police said the three men in custody had criminal records.

Two experts from the Australian Federal Police joined the probe as local authoritie­s appealed for more informatio­n about another man seen in the area. There was no update from Nasheed’s hospital since it announced last Saturday he was off life support and out of danger, but would remain in intensive care.

Family members said he was able to speak to close relatives last Saturday (8).

Nasheed underwent 16 hours of surgery to remove shrapnel from his body and doctors said one shard narrowly missed his heart. There has been no claim of responsibi­lity for the attack, but officials from Nasheed’s Maldivian Democratic Party have alleged that religious extremists and political interests could be involved.

The Indian Ocean archipelag­o of 340,000 people is majority Muslim, and in October 2019 police arrested a suspected Daesh recruiter accused of sending dozens of Maldivians to Syria.

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