The Standard (St. Catharines)

Man had plotted before

Gunman killed by police had been acquitted of planning terror attack at Sydney army base

- ROD MCGUIRK

CANBERRA, Australia — A gunman who killed a man and took a woman hostage before being killed in a police shootout had been acquitted of plotting a terror attack at a Sydney army base years earlier, police said Tuesday. Three police officers were wounded.

The siege Monday at an apartment building in a Melbourne suburb was being treated as an act of terror, but Victoria state police Chief Commission­er Graham Ashton said the gunman appeared to have acted alone and not as part of any ongoing plot or threat.

“There is nothing that we’ve found thus far that would suggest to us that this was anything that was ... planned or done in concert with others,” Ashton said.

The gunman, Yacqub Khayre, 29, was one of two men acquitted by a jury in 2010 of plotting a suicide attack in Sydney. Three people were convicted of conspiracy in that plot, which police thwarted before it could be executed.

Khayre, a Somali refugee, has an extensive and violent criminal record. He was sentenced in 2012 to five-and-a-half years in prison on conviction­s including aggravated burglary after beating a woman in her home.

He was initially denied parole after serving a minimum three years but was released on Dec. 8, Deputy Police Commission­er Shane Patton said.

Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull said he would speak with state leaders Friday about changing state laws so that dangerous criminals are not released from prison early on parole.

“There have been too many cases of people on parole committing violent offences of this kind,” Turnbull told reporters.

Police said Khayre booked an appointmen­t on Monday with an escort in an apartment building in Brighton and arrived carrying a sawed-off shotgun, sparking a two-hour siege.

Police were called after neighbours heard the shotgun discharge as Khayre killed a Chinese-born Australian man employed by the escort agency in the lobby.

Khayre then called police to say he had a hostage in an apartment and made threats to her if police intervened. They tried to negotiate with him before Khayre walked out of the building firing the shotgun.

One police officer was shot in the neck and ear and two officers suffered wounds to their hands, but none of the wounds was lifethreat­ening, Ashton said.

The woman, a 36-year-old Columbian national, was bound during her ordeal and had been “very significan­tly traumatize­d,” Patton said. But she had not been physically harmed.

Khayre spoke about al-Qaida in phone calls to police and to Seven Network TV, and Ashton said the gunman may have plotted to lure police into an ambush. But it was too early to know if the gunman set out to target police or “seized the opportunit­y he thought was presented to him,” Ashton said.

Ashton said there was nothing to link the violence with a van and knife attacks in London in which three assailants killed seven people.

Police did not regard Islamic State’s claim of responsibi­lity for the Melbourne violence as evidence that it was planned.

The Seven Network said it had received a phone call Monday afternoon from a distressed woman who said she was involved in a hostage situation.

“We asked her more informatio­n, at that point a man came on the same line and said ‘This is for IS, this is for al-Qaida,’ ” Seven news director Simon Pristel said.

“We asked for more informatio­n and that’s when he hung up,” Pristel added.

 ?? MAL FAIRCLOUGH/GETTY IMAGES ?? A special operations officer puts on a bomb suit at the scene of a shootout in a Melbourne suburb on Tuesday. A man was killed in a gun battle with police during an hour-long standoff after taking a hostage Monday.
MAL FAIRCLOUGH/GETTY IMAGES A special operations officer puts on a bomb suit at the scene of a shootout in a Melbourne suburb on Tuesday. A man was killed in a gun battle with police during an hour-long standoff after taking a hostage Monday.

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