The Borneo Post

Knife attacker named as known extremist

- A2 A6

Hassan Khalif Shire Ali flfl ed to Australia as a child with his family in the 1980s

MELBOURNE: A Somaliborn Australian who carried out a deadly knife rampage in Melbourne held extremist views and was known to intelligen­ce services, authoritie­s said yesterday, as they carried out raids and interviewe­d dozens of witnesses.

Australian Federal Police said 30-year-old Hassan Khalif Shire Ali – who was shot dead after driving a 4x4 laden with gas cylinders into the city centre and stabbing three people – fled to Australia as a child with his family in the 1980s.

He stabbed three people before being confronted by members of the public and armed officers who eventually shot him in the chest. One of his victims died at the scene while two others were wounded.

Authoritie­s have questioned around 35 people who saw the rush hour attack, which although crude, was said to have been designed to ‘cause terror and cause maximum casualties’ in the heart Australia’s bustling second city.

Armed officers raided two addresses in the west and northeast of the city, linked to the perpetrato­r’s family and associates, although there is not thought to be an ongoing threat.

The man killed by Shire Ali was named by local media as 74-yearold Sisto Malaspina, an icon of Melbourne’s thriving culinary culture who ran a famous Italian cafe.

Two other men wounded in the attack are still being treated but are expected to make a recovery.

Australian authoritie­s now face difficult questions about how Shire Ali, who was known to the Australian Security Intelligen­ce Organisati­on for at least three years, was able to carry out an attack.

He had his Australian passport revoked in 2015 amid fears he was trying to travel to Syria to join the Islamic State group.

His brother will go on trial next year on separate terror-related charges – accused of trying to acquire a firearm and kill people in a New Years’ Eve crowd.

“The assessment was made that whilst he had radicalise­d views he didn’t pose a threat to the national security environmen­t,” Ian Mccartney, a federal police counterter­rorism official said of Shire Ali.

Mccartney described the attack as a ‘wake up call’ even as the Islamic State loses territory in Iraq and Syria, where Australian forces are part of a coalition fighting the group.

“The circumstan­ces of how he and when he moved from having these radicalise­d views to carrying out this attack yesterday will be a key focus of the investigat­ion,” Mccartney added. — AFP

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 ??  ?? People pay their respects for Malaspina outside Pellegrini’s Espresso Bar in Melbourne. — AFP photos
People pay their respects for Malaspina outside Pellegrini’s Espresso Bar in Melbourne. — AFP photos
 ??  ?? This handout video grab via the Instagram account of Chris Newport shows a man fighting with policemen in downtown Melbourne after he stabbed a number of people.
This handout video grab via the Instagram account of Chris Newport shows a man fighting with policemen in downtown Melbourne after he stabbed a number of people.
 ??  ?? An Australian police officer stands outside a property that was searched by Australian counter-terrorism investigat­ors, located in the Melbourne suburb of Werribee, Australia. — Reuters photo
An Australian police officer stands outside a property that was searched by Australian counter-terrorism investigat­ors, located in the Melbourne suburb of Werribee, Australia. — Reuters photo
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