Gulf News

Five charged over Sydney terror plot

ARRESTS AND CHARGES STEM FROM EVIDENCE GATHERED DURING RAIDS

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Five people, including a 15-year-old boy, were charged yesterday in Sydney over a terror plot targeting a government building, with authoritie­s expressing alarm at the age of those being radicalise­d.

The teenager and a 20-yearold man were seized at their homes yesterday morning and accused of conspiracy to conduct an act in preparatio­n for a terrorist act. Three others currently in jail, aged 21, 22, and 22, were later charged with the same offence, police said.

The arrests and charges stem from evidence gathered during predawn raids in Australia late last year in which 15 people were taken into custody and an alleged plan to kidnap and behead a member of the public was uncovered.

Australian Federal Police’s Deputy Commission­er for National Security Michael Phelan said the plot linked to yesterday’s developmen­ts was not new, but related to last year’s operation where material about targeting a government building was first discovered.

“Last December, there were a number of documents seized as related to the search warrants we undertook in Sydney and those documents clearly talked about a plan and there was government buildings named in those plans,” he said, adding that one of them was the Australian Federal Police offices.

“As a result of putting all of that informatio­n together, working through those documents, putting physical and electronic surveillan­ce together, we were able to build a case of conspiracy for five people involved in the preparatio­n of these documents.”

Asked how developed the plot was, Phelan replied: “Enough for us to disrupt it at the time in December.”

The arrests were part of Operation Appleby, a rolling investigat­ion into persons suspected of being involved in domestic acts of terrorism, foreign incursions into Syria and Iraq and the funding of terrorist organisati­ons.

Canberra is concerned about the prospect of lonewolf attacks by individual­s inspired by organisati­ons such as the Daesh group, and has cracked down on Australian­s attempting to travel to conflict zones including Syria and Iraq.

Canberra is concerned about the prospect of lone-wolf attacks by individual­s inspired by organisati­ons such as the Daesh group, and has cracked down on Australian­s attempting to travel to conflict zones including Syria and Iraq.

Cheng murder link

The country lifted its terror threat alert to high over a year ago, introduced new national security laws and has conducted several counterter­rorism raids since.

The most recent were in October when four people were arrested in Sydney over the terror-linked murder of police employee Curtis Cheng.

The person blamed for that killing, Farhad Jabar, was also only 15, and police subsequent­ly said they were aware of 12 men or boys in the community who they believe could commit an act of terror.

Authoritie­s said those charged yesterday were “associates” of the men accused of involvemen­t in the Cheng murder.

Phelan added that while those detained were likely influenced by militants overseas, police were not alleging they were working to orders from Daesh.

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