The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Australia PM, Muslim leaders spar over terror comments

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SYDNEY: Australian Muslim leaders said yesterday they would boycott a meeting with Prime Minister Scott Morrison after he said they needed to do more to halt terror attacks in the country.

Morrison singled out Muslim community leaders as having a ‘special responsibi­lity’ to counter ‘the radical and dangerous ideology of extremist Islam’ following a terror attack in Melbourne earlier this month that left two dead.

“They must be proactive, they must be alert and they must call this out,” Morrison said, adding that he would hold a roundtable meeting with Muslim leaders this week to discuss the problem.

But Australian Grand Mufti Ibrahim Abu Mohamed and a group of other senior Muslim figures rejected the invitation in an open letter to Morrison Wednesday.

The men said they were ‘deeply concerned and disappoint­ed’ with comments by Morrison and other ministers ‘which infer that the community is collective­ly culpable for the criminal actions of individual­s and should be doing more to prevent such acts of violence’.

“These statements have achieved nothing to address underlying issues, but rather, have alienated large segments of the Muslim community,” they said in the letter, which was published by Australian media.

The letter prompted a tweetstorm from Morrison, who accused those behind the boycott of ‘continuing down a path of denial’ and making their communitie­s ‘less safe and more vulnerable’.

“We all have responsibi­lities to make Australia safe, and that means making sure Muslim communitie­s do not become infiltrate­d with this dangerous ideology,” he tweeted.

In the Nov 9 attack in Melbourne, a Somali-born man who police said was inspired by the so-called Islamic State, stabbed and killed one man and wounded two others before being fatally shot by police.

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