Oman Daily Observer

Etihad helping Australia with plane ‘terror plot’

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SYDNEY: Etihad Airways said on Tuesday it was helping Australian police with their investigat­ion into an alleged plot to bring down a plane, as authoritie­s sifted through evidence from counter-terrorism raids.

Four men were arrested in Sydney on Saturday evening, with security tightened across all major Australian domestic and internatio­nal airports as investigat­ors search several homes across the city.

Local media on Monday reported that the men, who have not yet been charged, planned to use poisonous gas or a crude bomb disguised as a meat mincer, although details of the alleged plot have not been confirmed by police.

“The Etihad Airways aviation security team is assisting the Australian Federal Police with its investigat­ion and the matter is ongoing,” the Abu Dhabi-based carrier said in a statement.

“Etihad is complying fully with the enhanced security measures at airports in Australia and monitoring the situation closely. Safety is the airline’s number one priority.”

Its statement came as Sydney’s Daily Telegraph reported that an Etihad flight to Abu Dhabi, which could have carried up to 500 people, was the target.

Australian Federal Police Commission­er Andrew Colvin said on Sunday an improvised explosive device was involved.

Unidentifi­ed officials told the Australian Broadcasti­ng Corporatio­n the suspects — reportedly Lebanese-Australian — might have links to the IS group in Syria.

Justice Minister Michael Keenan told the national broadcaste­r he would not comment on the IS links, but stressed the significan­ce of the attack if it had taken place.

“What is very clear is that, if these allegation­s were to have gone ahead, it would have been just an enormously dreadful thing to have happened to our country,” he said late on Monday.

“It’s clear that this has been inspired by radical ideology. We’re obviously looking at the links that they have to the organisati­on within the Middle East, but there’s nothing further that I can say about that at this stage,” he added.

Australia’s national terror alert level was raised in September 2014 amid concerns over attacks by individual­s inspired by organisati­ons such as IS.

A total of 12 attacks, before the latest one, have been prevented in the past few years and 70 people have been charged.

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