Male, Maldives: A liberal blogger, Yameen Rasheed, was stabbed to death in the politically restive Maldivian capital Male, his family members and colleagues said Sunday. He was 29.

Rasheed was found in the stairwell of his apartment with multiple stab wounds to his neck and chest early Sunday and died shortly after being taken to hospital, family members said.

His blog, The Daily Panic, had a considerable following and was known for poking fun at politicians.

“With The Daily Panic, I hope to cover and comment upon the news, satirise the frequently unsatirisable politics of Maldives,” he wrote on his blog.

Rasheed is the third media personality to be targeted in the Maldives in the past five years. Blogger Esmail Rasheed, also known as Hilath, was stabbed and wounded by an unidentified attacker in 2012.

A journalist with the independent Minivan News, Ahmad Rilwan, was likely abducted in August 2014 and has been missing ever since.

Exiled opposition leader and former president Mohammad Nasheed on Sunday demanded action on the latest killing of an independent journalist.

“President Nasheed is demanding an inquiry with international participation so it can’t be swept under the carpet as usual,” a spokesman for Nasheed said.

Opposition leader

Political tension has mounted in the Maldives after a failed bid by the opposition to impeach the country’s parliamentary speaker late last month.

The regime of President Abdullah Yameen has arrested the last Maldives opposition leader not to be in jail or in exile as part of a major government crackdown on rival politicians, who narrowly failed to seize control of parliament.

Qasim Ibrahim, who ran for president in 2013 and currently heads the Jumhooree Party (JP), was one of four signatories of an opposition unity deal aimed at toppling Yameen.

Ebrahim was briefly detained and released earlier this month only to be rearrested over the weekend.

A coalition of opposition parties, led by exiled leader Nasheed, is trying to undermine Yameen before elections next year.

It faces an uphill struggle, with all opposition leaders now in exile or in jail after a years-long crackdown on dissent under Yameen’s leadership.

The clampdown has raised fears over the country’s stability and dented its image as a tourist paradise