Indonesia's security minister has been stabbed by a man who police say was “inspired” by the Islamic State group.
Wiranto, who uses one name, was getting out of a car in a town square in Banten province when he was attacked.
The former military chief and ex-presidential candidate, 72, suffered “two deep wounds” to his stomach but is in a stable condition.
A police officer and two other people were injured, while two suspects, a man and a woman, were arrested.
The minister was taken by helicopter to hospital in the capital Jakarta. He is conscious, the Banten police chief said.
Police said the attacker had been exposed to “IS radicalism”, while State Intelligence Agency chief Budi Gunawan told reporters it was believed the suspects were part of the Jamaah Ansharut Daulah (JAD) network, which is linked to IS.
“From our preliminary investigation, the suspected attackers were exposed to radicalism since their target is a public bureaucrat and member of the police, whom they saw as enemy,” Dedi Prasetyo, Indonesian national police spokesman, told BBC Indonesian. “These professions threaten their existence.”
JAD has claimed to be behind some of the worst attacks in Indonesia – the world's most populous Muslim nation – in recent years, including an attack on a church in 2018, which left 13 dead.