Albuquerque Journal

Australia attack against clergy being treated as terrorism

- BY MARK BAKER AND ROD MCGUIRK

SYDNEY — Australian police say a knife attack in Sydney that wounded a bishop and a priest during a church service as horrified worshipper­s watched online and in person was an act of terrorism.

Police arrested a 16-year-old boy Tuesday after the stabbing at Christ the Good Shepherd Church that injured Bishop Mar Mari Emmanuel and a priest. Both are expected to survive.

New South Wales Police Commission­er Karen Webb said the suspect’s comments pointed to a religious motive for the attack.

“We’ll allege there’s a degree of premeditat­ion on the basis that this person has travelled to that location, which is not near his residentia­l address, he has travelled with a knife and subsequent­ly the bishop and the priest have been stabbed,” Webb said. “They’re lucky to be alive.”

The teenager was known to police but was not on a terror watch list, Webb said.

Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said the boy was 16, adding that “there is no place for violence in our community. There’s no place for violent extremism.” Previously authoritie­s had said he was 15.

The Christ the Good Shepherd in suburban Wakeley streams sermons online and worshipper­s watched as a person in black clothes approached the altar and stabbed the bishop and priest Isaac Royel during a church service Monday evening before the congregati­on overpowere­d him, police said.

A crowd of hundreds seeking revenge gathered outside the Orthodox Assyrian church, hurling bricks and bottles, injuring police officers and preventing police from taking the teen outside, officials said.

The teen suspect and at least two police officers were also hospitaliz­ed, Acting Assistant Police Commission­er Andrew Holland told journalist­s.

The church in a message on social media said the bishop and priest were in stable condition and asked for people’s prayers. “It is the bishop’s and father’s wishes that you also pray for the perpetrato­r,” the statement said.

Holland commended the congregati­on for subduing the teen before calling police. When asked if the teen’s fingers had been severed, he said the hand injuries were “severe.”

More than 100 police reinforcem­ents arrived before the teen was taken from the church in the hours-long incident. Several police vehicles were damaged, Holland said.

Australian­s were still in shock after a lone assailant stabbed six people to death in a Sydney shopping mall on Saturday and injured more than a dozen others.

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