ONE OF the three men arrested for Thursday nights attackon the life of Maldives Speaker and former president Mohamed Nasheed is believed to have links to Islamist extremists, official sources told The Indian Express.
No group has claimed responsibility for the attack. But Maldives police chief Mohammed Hameed HAS said the attack is being investigated as a terrorist act. Maldives has also raised its terror alert level to amber, the highest for the country, Maldivian National Defence Force (MDNF) chief Major General Abdulla Shamaal told reporters Friday.
Police said they were looking for four people of interest who had been see engaging in suspicious activities in the area. The IED explosion was most likely triggered by a mobile phone or a remote device, according to Shamaal.
Two men were arrested early on Saturday for their suspected role in the attack, in which Nasheed suffered extensive shrapnel wounds. The third suspect, arrested late Saturday the arrest was officially announced Sunday morning is alleged to have detonated the IED using a remote device, likely a mobile phone . One of the arrested men has known links an Islamist group, according to official sources. The crude IED was fixed to a motorcycle parked close to Nasheeds car and exploded just as he approached the vehicle, outside to his home.
Nasheed, who is now Speaker of the Majlis, the official name of the Maldivian Parliament, underwent surgeries for removal of shrapnel on Thursday night and Friday. His condition has improved, and he has been taken off the ventilator, the sources said.
According to police, Australian Federal Police (AFP) are assisting in the investigation — two AFP officials stationed in Colombo flew into Male on Saturday morning. The MDNF said two Male-based British experts of the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime are also assisting in the investigation.
The Australian Federal Police section of the Australian High Commission Colombo works closely with the Sri Lanka Police Service and the Maldives Police Service, and other Sri Lankan and Maldives law enforcement agencies, engaging in bilateral law enforcement co-operation, according to the AFP website.
Incidentally, 34 Australians involved in the IPL, including players, umpires and commentators, arrived in the Maldives on Friday, a day after the T20 tournament was cancelled due to Covid concerns.
CCTV footage of Thursday’s attack on Maldives Speaker and former president Mohamed Nasheed. The video shows Nasheed (in white shirt) walking through a crowded and narrow lane outside his home with his bodyguards.
video via @vaghuthuonline
Read: https://t.co/JPD2ftKraWpic.twitter.com/rZl6XOoK7n
The Indian Express (@IndianExpress) May 9, 2021
Defence Minister Mariya Didi said Friday night that the explosive used in the IED was not military grade.
CCTV footage of the blast released by a website Saturday shows Nasheed walking through a crowded and narrow Male lane outside his home, with his bodyguards ahead and behind him. The lane is packed on one side with parked two-wheelers. The IED goes off as soon as he reaches his car parked at the head of the lane, the video shows.
Shamaal said security forces had made requests to declare the road in front of Nasheeds house a no-parking area, but this was not done. There was no prior intelligence about the attack, he said.
Nasheed’s car driver suffered auditory shock from the blast, and the former president was taken to the hospital in a back-up vehicle. He arrived at the hospital within eight minutes of the attack, which occurred at 8.27 pm, defence minister Didi said on Friday.
Nasheed has been outspoken against the growing influence of Islamist extremists in Maldives. A large number of young Maldivians are believed to have joined ISIS in 2014-15 to fight in Syria and Iraq. In January, Maldives police disclosed that eight people arrested in November 2020 were extremists who had been training to carry out terror attacks in the Indian Ocean atoll nation. The leader of the group, the police said, had confirmed links to IS.
Police said they were looking for four people of interest who had been seen engaging in suspicious activities in the area. The IED explosion was most likely triggered by a mobile phone or a remote device, according to Shamaal.
Two men were arrested early on Saturday for their suspected role in the attack, in which Nasheed suffered extensive shrapnel wounds, and a third in the evening. One of them has “known links” an Islamist group, according to official sources.
Maldivian police officers inspect the area after a blast outside the family home of the speaker of parliament, former President Mohamed Nasheed, in Male, Maldives May 6, 2021. Maldives Police Service/Handout via REUTERSNasheed, who is now Speaker of the Majlis, the official name of the Maldivian Parliament, underwent surgeries for removal of shrapnel on Thursday night and Friday. His condition has improved, and he has been taken off the ventilator, the sources said.
According to police, Australian Federal Police (AFP) are assisting in the investigation — two AFP officials stationed in Colombo flew into Male on Saturday morning. The MDNF said two Male-based British experts of the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime are also assisting in the investigation.

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