Shanghai Daily

Arrests avert Australian ‘mass gathering’ attack

- (Reuters)

AUSTRALIAN police have arrested three men who were allegedly preparing to attack a “mass gathering” in Melbourne.

It comes less than two weeks after a man was killed in the nation’s second-largest city in what police said was an act of terrorism.

Australian federal and state police, the Australian Security Intelligen­ce Organizati­on, and other agencies that form part of the Joint Counter Terrorism Team carried out the arrests yesterday morning.

Police said three men, Hanifi Halis, 21, Samed Erikioglu, 26 and Ertunc Erikioglu, 30, were taken into custody after they allegedly sought to acquire a semi-automatic gun to carry out an attack.

All three men were charged with planning a terrorist act. They are all Australian citizens, and their passports were canceled earlier this year.

“We now have sufficient evidence to act in relation to preventing a terrorist attack,” Graham Ashton, chief commission­er of Victoria Police, said. Police said the suspects had yet to decide on the site of their planned attack but they believed it was imminent.

“They were certainly looking at a place of mass gathering, where there would be crowds,” Ashton said. “They were trying to focus on trying to have a place where they could kill as many people as possible.”

Police said they believed the arrests had nullified any threat from the group.

Police said they are now combing through 17,000 intercepte­d phone calls and 10,500 messages exchanged between the group as part of evidence collected during their arrests. Police said it will take several months to transcribe the calls and messages.

Australia, a staunch US ally that sent troops to Afghanista­n and Iraq, has been on heightened alert since 2014 for attacks by home-grown militants returning from fighting in the Middle East or their supporters.

Police said the three men were known to authoritie­s and their passports were canceled because of concerns they would travel to a conflict zone overseas.

The arrests came less than two weeks after a man set fire to a pickup truck laden with gas cylinders in the center of Melbourne and stabbed three people, killing one, before he was shot by police.

As in that case, police said the three men had been inspired by Islamic State rather than being directed by the militant group.

Police said the three suspects did not have any links to the man responsibl­e for the November 9 attack, although they had escalated their planning in the aftermath of that assault.

“Certainly over the last week they have become energized about doing something more quickly,” Ashton said.

Police said the suspects had been using encrypted messaging apps to communicat­e, which Home Affairs Minister Peter Dutton said was further evidence of the need to amend laws.

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