Kuwait Times

Australia warns on encrypted apps as Southeast Asia vows terror cooperatio­n

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SYDNEY: Use of encrypted messaging apps to plan terrorist attacks is the greatest threat facing intelligen­ce agencies in modern times, Australia warned yesterday as Southeast Asian leaders vowed closer cooperatio­n to counter extremism. An ASEAN-Australia special summit in Sydney heard that use of the “dark web” was a spiraling problem and countries in the region must work together to keep on top of it.

Australia’s Home Affairs Minister Peter Dutton told the meeting “the use of encrypted messaging apps by terrorists and criminals is potentiall­y the most significan­t degradatio­n of intelligen­ce capability in modern times”. He said the only way to deal with the problem, and the increasing use of the internet by groups like Islamic State to radicalize and recruit new members, was together. “We have to be constantly alert, constantly working with our neighbors in the region,” said Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull, pointing to the increasing­ly trans-national nature of terrorism.

“Sharing of intelligen­ce is critically important. As we all know, what may appear to be a not especially important, not especially consequent­ial piece of intelligen­ce, may be the piece that connects the jigsaw for somebody else’s investigat­ion. “Trust, sharing, collaborat­ion, it is absolutely critical.” Leaders of the Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations signed a memorandum of understand­ing after a day of counter-terrorism talks, agreeing to work together to develop “best practice counter-terrorism legislatio­n”.

They also agreed to regional dialogues and workshops covering electronic evidence, financial intelligen­ce, and ways to tackle online radicaliza­tion. Canberra is already helping Southeast Asian states choke terrorist financing and counter violent extremism. The problem has been exacerbate­d by jihadists now being forced out of Syria and Iraq with the Islamic State caliphate mostly crushed, and into other countries. The issue was driven home last year when pro-Islamic State militants seized the southern Philippine city of Marawi, with Australia aiding Manila to win it back.

‘Warped and evil’ Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak praised Australia’s initiative to strengthen cooperatio­n, and said countering online extremist propaganda was especially critical. “This is our new main battlegrou­nd, to win the hearts and minds of our youth through social media, so that they do not easily succumb to the warped, perverse and evil ideology of Daesh,” he said, referring to Islamic State. Najib added that “the more we work together on these issues the more successful we will be”. “The more united we are, the more effective we will be in combatting this terrible and inhumane scourge. None of us is safe from it but together we will be safer.”

Australia has suffered six terror attacks in recent years and disrupted 14 more, including a plot to bring down a plane departing Sydney. In response, Canberra has consolidat­ed key functions such as national security, immigratio­n, counter-terrorism, cyber-security, and border protection under a newly-created Home Affairs department, headed by Dutton. —AFP

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