Australian stabbed in Maldives by suspected IS extremists

Men with suspected links to IS have been arrested in the Maldives over the stabbing of three foreign nationals, including an Australian.

The Maldives, best known for its beaches and tourism, is also home to an extremist group aligned with IS.

The Maldives, best known for its beaches and tourism, is also home to an extremist group aligned with IS. Source: AAP

Maldives police have arrested three men over the stabbing of two Chinese nationals and an Australian - and are probing their suspected links with the so-called Islamic State.

The three men were stabbed on Tuesday night in Hulhumale, an island just north of capital city Male, local police said via Twitter.

“We are continuously monitoring the status of the victims of this heinous attack,” police said in a statement.

“Their condition is reported to be stable.”
One of the Chinese nationals was a tourist and the two others worked in the city.

Australia's Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade said it was trying to contact an Australian man hospitalised in the Maldives.

"Owing to our privacy obligations we will not provide further comment," a spokesperson said.
A Maldivian radical group affiliated with IS had taken responsibility for the attack in a video posted online, local media reported on Wednesday.

One of the three masked men seen in the video accused the Maldivian government of being run by “infidels” and warned more attacks were coming.

Police said they were working to confirm the veracity of the video.
Last year, a 35-year-old man identified as a leader for IS in the Maldives by the US authorities was arrested for allegedly leading Islamic State recruitment in the mainly Sunni Muslim nation.

The archipelago in the Indian Ocean derives much of its income from tourism.

IS claimed responsibility for deadly bombings in Sri Lanka in April last year and has been looking to bolster its presence in the subcontinent after being driven out of its self-styled caliphate in Iraq and Syria.

The Maldives parliament has given sweeping investigative powers to counter-terrorism agencies and authorities have stepped up operations against hardline Islamist groups.

Additional reporting: AFP, Reuters.


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