The Borneo Post

Police defend decision to declare church stabbing a ‘terrorist’ act

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Australian police yesterday defended their decision to declare a 16-year-old’s alleged stabbing of a bishop in a Sydney church a ‘terrorist’ act as community leaders fretted over its impact.

Bishop Mar Mari Emmanuel was slashed on Monday during a live-streamed sermon in the Assyrian community’s Christian church in western Sydney.

No one died but the bishop was stabbed in the head and chest and taken to hospital.

The attacker was rapidly subdued and held within the Christ the Good Shepherd Church building in Wakeley.

A riot then erupted outside as hundreds of congregant­s and members of the community vented their fury, some of them throwing rocks and injuring police officers deployed to the scene, police said.

The teenager was being treated in a Sydney hospital Wednesday and may remain there for several more days, said New South Wales police commission­er Karen Webb.

Webb, who has described the attack as religiousl­y motivated extremism, said she made the ‘terrorist’ designatio­n hours after the attack, strictly in line with state law.

The 2002 legislatio­n says a terrorist act is one that harms a person, is motivated by a political, religious or ideologica­l cause, and is aimed at intimidati­ng the public.

Webb said she was satisfied the attack met the legal criteria.

“I made that declaratio­n without hesitation,” she said.

But the police chief said she could understand people’s concerns.

“We have got just as many questions about what was on the mind of the young person and that’s why an investigat­ion is now important,” she told public broadcaste­r ABC.

A ‘terrorist’ declaratio­n does not mean the teenager will be charged with terrorism, she said.

As a result of the designatio­n, a joint counter-terrorism task force opened a probe, combining state and federal police forces and the intelligen­ce service ASIO.

A Muslim community leader in Sydney said police may have “jumped the gun” with the terrorism designatio­n.

“I just don’t think it helps the situation,” Gamel Kheir, secretary of the Lebanese Muslim Associatio­n, told AFP.

“Why are we so quick to jump to a definition of terrorism when religion is involved?” he asked.

Kheir said there was a gap between the community perception of a terrorist act and the police use of terrorism legislatio­n.

For many people, the term terrorism would apply more to Saturday’s knife rampage in a Sydney shopping mall, in which six people were killed, he said.

Sydney’s main Lakemba Mosque, of which the associatio­n is caretaker, had increased security since Monday’s attack, Kheir said.

The measures followed threats carried on social media against the Lakemba Mosque and other mosques closer to the site of the church attack, he said. — AFP

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