Khaleej Times

Australia ramps up airport security

- AP

australian­s can be assured that we have very fine intelligen­ce services and we moved extremely quickly on this one and, as you can see, with the right outcomes

canberra — Security remained heightened in airports around Australia with more intense screening of luggage after law enforcemen­t officials thwarted what a police chief described on Monday as a “credible attempt to attack an aircraft.”

Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull and Border Protection Minister Peter Dutton declined to comment on newspaper reports that extremists planned to kill the occupants of a plane with poison gas and that a homemade bomb was to be disguised as a kitchen mincer.

“Police will allege they had the intent and were developing the capability,” Turnbull told Australian Broadcasti­ng Corp.

Turnbull announced on Sunday that “a terrorist plot to bring down an airplane” had been disrupted, but revealed few details.

Four men arrested in raids in Sydney late on Saturday — two Lebanese-Australian fathers and their sons — had yet to be charged.

Australian Federal Police Commission­er Andrew Colvin said a court ruled on Monday that the four could be detained without charge for seven days from their arrest under counterter­rorism laws.

“We believe we have disrupted a legitimate and credible attempt to attack an aircraft,” Colvin told reporters without elaboratin­g.

Colvin has repeatedly described the threat as a “device,” without mentioning whether it was explosive.

“The plot that we are investigat­ing we believe was an attempt to put a device onto an aircraft, but beyond that the speculatio­n is just that — speculatio­n,” he said, adding that police had “many working theories.”

Colvin and the government will not comment on media reports that the suspects were not previously known to Australian security officials and that their arrests followed a tip from a foreign intelligen­ce agency.

“Australian­s can be assured that we have very fine intelligen­ce services and we moved extremely quickly on this one and, as you can see, with the right outcomes,” Turnbull said.

The Australian newspaper cited multiple anonymous sources say- ing that the plotters were constructi­ng a “non-traditiona­l” explosive device that could have emitted a toxic, sulfur-based gas to kill or immobilise everyone on the aircraft.

Sydney’s The Daily Telegraph newspaper reported that the plotters planned to make a bomb from wood shavings and explosive material inside a piece of kitchen equipment such as a mincing machine.

Police raided five homes on Saturday and removed a domestic grinder and a mincer used to make sausage, the newspaper said.

The plot involved smuggling the device onto a flight from Sydney

Malcolm Turnbull, Australian PM

to the Middle East, as carry-on luggage, the newspaper said.

Fairfax Media reported that the bomb was found in a home in the inner-city suburb of Surry Hills, a few doors from the local mosque.

Turnbull declined to say whether the group was guided by someone overseas.

“It’ll be alleged that that this was an extremist, terrorist motivation,” the prime minister said.

Dutton, the border protection minister, urged travelers to arrive at Australian airports two hours before domestic flights and three hours before internatio­nal flights to allow time for more screening. Luggage should be kept to a mini- mum and those accompanyi­ng travelers should not enter secured parts of terminals.

He declined to detail the threat that the security staff were searching for.

“There’ll be lots of speculatio­n around what the intent was ... but I don’t want to add to that,” Dutton told Nine Network television. “Our focus now really is making sure that people who are planning a terrorist attack are thwarted.” Security has been increased at Sydney Airport since Thursday because of the plot and has since been increased in all major Australian internatio­nal and domestic terminals.

Turnbull would not speculate on how long airport security would remain elevated. —

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