The Borneo Post

Foiled Australia plane plot directed by IS

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SYDNEY: A man instructed by Islamic State to bring down an Etihad Airways f light tried to use an unsuspecti­ng passenger to carry a bomb on board, with a second poisonous gas plot also in the works, Australian police alleged yesterday.

The improvised device, using “high military- grade explosive”, was due to be smuggled onto a July 15 service from Sydney, but the attempt was aborted before they reached security.

Two men – Khaled Khayat and Mahmoud Khayat – have been charged with terrorism offences and were refused bail yesterday, with a third still being questioned.

Police claim one of them planted the bomb in the passenger’s luggage. Local reports said the luggage belonged to the man’s own, innocent, brother.

“We will be alleging the person who was to carry the IED had no idea they were carrying an IED,” said Australian Federal Police Deputy Commission­er Michael Phelan.

“There is a little bit of conjecture as to why it didn’t go ahead. It didn’t get past the check-in.”

Police are working on the theory that it was called off because the device may have been too heavy.

Authoritie­s also foiled a second alleged plot involving a “chemical dispersion device”, designed to release hydrogen sulphide, but this was in the early stages.

Hydrogen sulphide is highly toxic, and often fatal for people exposed to it.

“Not only have we stopped the IED that was believed to go on the plane but we have also completely disrupted the intended chemical

We will be alleging the person who was to carry the IED had no idea they were carrying an IED. There is a little bit of conjecture as to why it didn’t go ahead. It didn’t get past the check-in.

dispersion device,” said Phelan.

The second plan was hatched after the first one failed, police alleged, and was not necessaril­y targeted at a plane.

“They were talking about crowded closed spaces, you know, potentiall­y public transport, and so on,” Phelan said, but added that they “got nowhere near making one”.

The plot was orchestrat­ed by “a senior member of the Islamic State” based overseas.

Communicat­ions with the extremist group began in April and they sent components and propellant­s through internatio­nal cargo from Turkey to the men, police said.

The men were then directed on how to build a bomb that would have caused “significan­t damage”.

“With assistance from the ISIL commander, the accused assembled the IED into what we believe was a functionin­g IED to be placed on that flight,” said Phelan, referring to Islamic State by an alternativ­e acronym.

The destinatio­n of the flight was not revealed, although reports have previously suggested it was Abu Dhabi. Etihad earlier this week confirmed it was working with authoritie­s in Australia on their investigat­ion.

Police would not reveal who the IS link was but said it will be alleged the men were introduced to him by a relative who is a senior IS member in Syria.

“It is a concern that it got through,” said Phelan about the bomb components arriving in Australia through the mail.

“What we’re alleging is the components of the IED originated in Turkey at this stage. We are very confident that we have found every single component of that IED.”

Security was tightened at domestic and internatio­nal airports across Australia after four men were arrested in raids in Sydney on Saturday over what Phelan called “one of the most sophistica­ted plots that has ever been attempted on Australian soil”.

Justice Minister Michael Keenan said the impacts “could have been catastroph­ic”.

“I understand that Australian­s will feel very unnerved about hearing this news and the police allege that we have been the target of a very serious ISIL plot.

“But I do want to remind everyone that this is the 13th time, because of the excellence of our law enforcemen­t agencies, that we have been able to stop a terrorist attack from occurring on Australian soil in the past three years,” he told reporters.

Khaled Khayat, 49, and Mahmoud Khayat, 32, have been charged with two counts of “acts done in preparatio­n for, or planning, a terrorist act” and are next due in court on Nov 14.

One of the four has been released without charge and another is still being questioned.

Michael Phelan, Australian Federal Police Deputy Commission­er

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 ??  ?? Senior Australian police officers walk from a house in the Sydney suburb of Surry Hills, Australia after raids in relation to a plot to attack a commercial aircraft. — Reuters photo
Senior Australian police officers walk from a house in the Sydney suburb of Surry Hills, Australia after raids in relation to a plot to attack a commercial aircraft. — Reuters photo
 ??  ?? Phelan (right) and New South Wales Police Deputy Commission­er David Hudson speak at a press conference related to arrests in a foiled aircraft attack plot at the Australian Federal Police headquarte­rs in Sydney, Australia. — Reuters photo
Phelan (right) and New South Wales Police Deputy Commission­er David Hudson speak at a press conference related to arrests in a foiled aircraft attack plot at the Australian Federal Police headquarte­rs in Sydney, Australia. — Reuters photo

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