Australian plane plot may have involved bomb or gas: Reports
SYDNEY: Four men accused of plotting to bring down a plane planned to use poisonous gas or a crude bomb disguised as a meat mincer, reports said Monday, with Australian officials calling preparations “advanced.”
The men — reportedly two LebaneseAustralian men and their sons — were arrested in raids across Sydney on Saturday evening.
The Sydney Daily Telegraph said they allegedly planned to carry the device on board a commercial flight from Sydney to a Middle East destination as hand luggage.
It said the idea was to use wood scrapings and explosive material inside a piece of kitchen equipment such as a mincing machine.
The Sydney Morning Herald also reported that a mincer was being examined, while The Australian newspaper cited multiple sources as saying it was a “non-traditional” device that could have emitted a toxic sulfur-based gas. This, it said, would have killed or immobilized everyone on the aircraft.
Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull said the plans were “advanced” but refused to comment on the conflicting claims over the method of attack.
“I have to respect the integrity of the investigations,” he said.
“But I can say that certainly, the police will allege they had the intent and were developing the capability.
“There will obviously be more to say over coming days. It will be alleged that this was an Islamist, extremist terrorist motivation.”
Australian Federal Police Commissioner Andrew Colvin on Sunday said the aviation industry was potentially a target and that an improvised explosive device (IED) was involved.
A magistrate late Sunday gave police an additional seven days to detain the men, who have not been officially named, without charge. Police continued to gather evidence Monday at the five homes raided, warning the investigation would be “very long and protracted.”
TV footage on Saturday showed riot police moving into a terraced house in the inner-city suburb of Surry Hills, with a man with a bandage on his head being led away by authorities, draped in a blanket.
A woman at the address denied they had any link to terrorism. Police reportedly acted after receiving information from an overseas intelligence agency, suggesting the men may have been directed by someone else.
Turnbull would not confirm this, but said “nowhere is far away from anywhere else these days.”
“In an age of the Internet and the age of social media and the age of instant messaging applications, Syria is not a long way away from Sydney,” he said. “And so that is the criticality of it — seamless cooperation.”