The Day

Australia police: Men tried to get bomb on Sydney plane

- By KRISTEN GELINEAU

Sydney — Two men facing terrorism charges in Australia were involved in an aborted attempt to place an improvised explosive device on an Etihad Airways flight out of Sydney last month in a plot directed by the Islamic State group, police said today.

One of the men, a 49-yearold from Sydney, brought the device to Sydney airport on July 15 in a piece of luggage that he had asked his brother to take with him on the flight — without telling the brother that the bag contained explosives, Australian Federal Police Deputy Commission­er Michael Phelan told reporters. But for reasons still unclear, the bag never got past the check-in counter. Instead, Phelan said, the man left the airport with the bag, and his brother continued onto the flight without it.

“This is one of the most sophistica­ted plots that has ever been attempted on Australian soil,” Phelan said. “If it hadn’t been for the great work of our intelligen­ce agencies and law enforcemen­t over a very quick period of time, then we could well have a catastroph­ic event in this country.”

The details Phelan provided today are the first that officials have released since four men were arrested in a series of raids in Sydney last weekend. Khaled Khayat, 49, and Mahmoud Khayat, 32, have been charged with two counts of planning a terrorist act. A third man remains in custody, while a fourth was released without charge. Khaled Khayat’s brother has not been charged in connection with the plot, because police believe he had no idea the bag contained explosives, Phelan said.

Lawyer Michael Coroneos appeared on behalf of Khaled and Mahmoud Khayat at a brief court hearing today, and the case was adjourned until Nov. 14. Police have not detailed the men’s relationsh­ip.

“They’re entitled to the presumptio­n of innocence,” Coroneos said outside court, declining to answer any other questions.

The components for the device, including what Phelan described as a “military-grade explosive,” were sent by a senior Islamic State member to the men in Sydney via air cargo from Turkey. An Islamic State commander then instructed the two men who have been charged on how to assemble the device, which police have since recovered, Phelan said.

After the July 15 bid failed, the men changed tactics and were in the early stages of devising a chemical dispersion device, which they hoped could release highly toxic hydrogen sulfide, Phelan said. No specific targets had been chosen, though an Islamic State member overseas had given the men suggestion­s about where such devices could be placed, such as crowded areas or on public transport.

“Hydrogen sulfide is very difficult to make, so I want to make it quite clear that while it may be a hypothetic­al plot, we were a long way from having a functional device,” Phelan said. “There were precursor chemicals that had been produced, but we were a long way from having a functionin­g (device).”

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