Third Arrest in Manhunt After Maldives Bomb Attack

A third man has been arrested following the attempted assassination of Maldives' former president Mohamed Nasheed, police said Sunday, as they renewed an appeal for more information about another suspect.
The democracy pioneer and climate
activist was seriously hurt after a bomb attack in the capital Male on Thursday
night that also injured a British national and two others, which police have
blamed on "religious extremists".
"We can confirm that a third individual has been
arrested in connection with the May 6 attack early today," police said in
a statement.
No further details about the man
were released.
Police also appealed for more
information about another man seen in the area where a motorcycle that the bomb
had been rigged to was parked.
The owner of the motorcycle as
well as another man were arrested on Saturday.
The bomb detonated as Nasheed
walked to his car.
Family members tweeted that the
53-year-old ex-president, now the parliament's speaker, remained in the
intensive care unit of a hospital.
But he was able to speak to close
relatives on Saturday after no longer needing life support, they added. There
was no immediate update on his condition from the hospital.
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 (MDP) have alleged that religious extremists and political
interests could be involved.
The Indian Ocean archipelago of
340,000 people is Muslim majority and in October 2019 police arrested a
suspected ISIS recruiter accused of sending dozens of Maldivians to Syria.
The same man was accused of
setting off a homemade bomb that wounded 12 Chinese tourists in Male in
September 2007.
Nasheed ended decades of one-party
rule in the Maldives and became its first democratically-elected president in
2008, only to be toppled in a military-backed coup in 2012.
He is known internationally as a
champion in the fight against climate change and rising sea levels that he says
threaten to submerge the nation of 1,192 coral islands.