Across the road from the Zikura Masjid, loud Hindi film music blasts out of astore selling high-end audio equipment. No-one seems to object: in the Maldives,the sacred and the profane have learned to coexist: Nasreen's views are those ofa small minority. Just around the corner, though, stand the Zeenia Manzilapartments, until recently the centre of Islamist efforts to change the localbalance. Inside a makeshift, one-room mosque in the building, Policeinvestigators say, a group of local residents linked to the ultra-right JamaatAhl-e-Hadis sect planned the Sultan Park bombing. Much of the funding for theSultan Park bombing, investigators in the Maldives believe, came in fromIslamist organisations based in Pakistan and the United Kingdom. Some USD 1,000was recovered from Sultan Park-accused Moosa Inas, but Police say thousands morewould have been needed to pay for the terror cell's frequent internationalmovements, proselytization activism, and recruitment operations. Investigatorsare, in particular, seeking to identify a United Kingdom national of South Asianorigin, who identified himself to members of the Sultan Park terror cell as 'AbuIssa'. Believed to be of South Asian descent, 'Abu Issa' is thought to havearrived in the Maldives soon after the 2005 Tsunami, armed with several thousanddollars in cash for victims then sheltered in the premises of a factory in Gan.