The Phnom Penh Post

Aussie spy agency says alt-right more of a threat than IS

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RIGHT-WING terrorists pose a growing threat in Australia, the country’s spy agency has warned, describing the extremist networks as “more cohesive and organised” than ever.

The Australian Security and Intelligen­ce Organisati­on’s (Asio) annual report released on Wednesday said extreme right-wing networks are not only better organised now, but “more sophistica­ted” than in the past.

“The threat from the extreme right-wing in Australia has increased in recent years,” it said.

“Extreme right-wing groups in Australia are more cohesive and organised than they have been over previous years, and will remain an enduring threat.”

The Christchur­ch mosque attacks that claimed the lives of 50 people “brought the rightwing extremist threat back into focus,” Asio said.

Suspected white supremacis­t Brenton Tarrant, an Australian citizen, is accused of carrying out the rampage in neighbouri­ng New Zealand in March.

The spy agency predicted that any future right-wing attack in Australia would likely be “low capability” and carried out by a lone wolf or small group, though it did not rule out the possibilit­y of a “sophistica­ted weapons attack”.

Australia’s strict gun laws have been widely credited with helping to avoid mass shootings such as the Christchur­ch massacre.

Asio said the overall terrorist threat in Australia “remains elevated” based on intelligen­ce that “indicates an intention and capability to conduct a terrorist attack in Australia”.

The collapse of the Islamic State caliphate has not significan­tly improved threat conditions, the report said, with Sunni Islamic extremism remaining the “principal source” of risk.

“The threat from homegrown terrorism, coupled with the anticipate­d attempts by some terrorist fighters to return to Australia, remains a matter of the gravest security concern,” it said.

Australia introduced controvers­ial new counter-terrorism laws in July that ban citizens who fought for the Islamic State (IS) from returning home for up to two years.

The government says 230 Australian­s travelled to Syria and Iraq to fight for IS, with 80 men and women still in active conflict zones.

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