An Australian state has ordered a review of how radicalized prisoners are managed after a teenage inmate reportedly carved an Islamic State motto on his army veteran cellmate’s forehead, officials said Sunday. The general manager of the Kempsey prison, 420 kilometers (260 miles) north of Sydney, had been suspended pending an investigation into the attack Thursday on the 40-year-old former soldier and how he came to share a cell with an Islamic radical, Corrective Services Commissioner Peter Severin said. Severin did not detail the allegations against the 18-year-old cellmate. But newspapers reported on Sunday that he had used a sharp object to carve on the soldier’s head “e 4 e” —short for “eye for an eye,” a phrase from Muslim, Christian and Jewish texts that features in Islamic State propaganda. The teen also reportedly poured boiling water on his cellmate. Prison guards’ union boss Steve McMahon told Australian Broadcasting Corp. the former soldier had been “severely beaten.” Severin said the veteran of the U.N. peacekeeping mission in East Timor “won’t have any lasting injuries.” The veteran remained in hospital on Sunday. “I’m appalled about the fact that these two were allowed to share a cell,” Severin told reporters. “At face