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Anti-terror strategy

Aussie PM urges developers to design protection from vehicle attacks

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Australian PM urges developers to design protection from vehicle attacks.

Melbourne: Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull called for developers to incorporat­e safety features into their projects to prevent militant attacks with vehicles and other weapons as he announced new plans to protect the public.

Turnbull unveiled Australia’s first national strategy to protect crowded places, which he said was initiated after a militant drove a truck into crowds in the French city of Nice last year, killing 84 people.

It comes days after a similar attack in the Spanish city of Barcelona killed 13 and injured more than 100, and follows a string of similar vehicle attacks around the world.

Turnbull told reporters the plan was designed for councils, business- es and venue operators to stop attacks with vehicles as well as with guns, knives, bombs or chemical devices.

“As we have seen from tragic events in Paris, London, Berlin and Barcelona, terrorists continue to target crowded places,” Turnbull said in a statement.

“The strategy will assist owners and operators to increase the safety, protection and resilience of crowded places across Australia.”

The plan offers a “toolkit” to work from.

Steps include the installati­on of bollards along main streets, and at shopping centres and outside sporting grounds.

Turnbull said while sites would be better protected, developers had to incorporat­e safety features into new projects on the drawing board.

“The best mitigation is done at the design stage where it can be done very unobtrusiv­ely,” he said.

“The most important thing is that security measures are put in place at that time.

“The threat is constantly evolving, and so what we have to do is make sure that we too are constantly improving and updating measures.”

Australia, a staunch US ally that has sent troops to Afghanista­n and Iraq, has been on alert for attacks by home-grown militants returning from fighting in the Middle East, or their supporters.

There have been several “lone wolf” attacks and officials say 13 significan­t plots have been foiled in the past few years.

In January, a man drove into pedestrian­s in the city of Melbourne, killing four and injuring more than 20.

Police said that incident was not terrorism-related but the city has put up about 140 concrete bollards around its centre.

Turnbull said the government was concerned about a young Australian who remains unaccounte­d for following the Barcelona attack.

The seven-year-old boy, Julian Cadman, who British media says has British and Australian nationalit­y, was separated from his mother who was taken to hospital in serious condition. — Reuters/AFP

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