Man stabs six, including tourists, in Zanzibar

Zanzibar has experienced sectarian and political tensions in recent years, including grenade explosions. FILE PHOTO

STONE TOWN

Six people in Zanzibar, including four foreign tourists, were stabbed and lightly injured by a young man at a restaurant in the capital of the east African archipelago, police said.

Police spokesman Hassan Nassir Ali said the attack took place on Sunday evening as the restaurant bustled with patrons breaking their Ramadan fast on the semi-autonomous, predominantly Muslim archipelago off the coast of Tanzania.

"The attacker, aged between 20 and 25, entered the restaurant and stabbed the people before running away," he said, adding that investigations indicated the suspect "has a mental disorder, caused by use of drugs."

"We are still hunting for the suspect before we can give details. We do not think it is related to terrorism, but it is bad for our tourism industry," said Ali.

KNIFE ATTACK

Eyewitness Omar Hassan described how a man armed with a knife stormed into the Lukman restaurant in the capital Stone Town armed with a knife and attacked one local person and three foreign tourists "who were here for dinner."

"After the attack which caused panic in the restaurant, the attacker also stabbed two other people while running away," said Hassan.

The police spokesman said the injured included a Canadian man who was injured around his mouth, two German women aged 20 and 24, who both sustained head injuries, and a 66-year-old French woman who had a stab wound near her eye.

All have been released from hospital except the French woman.

TENSIONS

The injuries of the two Tanzanians were not detailed.

Zanzibar has experienced sectarian and political tensions in recent years — including grenade explosions — with the unrest affecting the key tourism industry.

In 2013 two British tourists and a Catholic priest were doused with acid in a series of attacks blamed on radical Islamists with ties to Somalia's Al-Shabaab, as the archipelago sees rising radicalisation.

Tourism is the main foreign currency earner for Zanzibar, famed for its white-sand beaches and historical buildings in Stone Town, listed as a world heritage site by Unesco.

"A thorough investigation must be conducted to find out whether the attacker really has mental problems and why he targeted the tourists," said Tourism Minister Rashid Juma.