Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Admission by Aussie prosecutor as startling as the arrest of Kamer

“I have never been more proud to be a Sri Lankan after having seen the immense support for me," said Lankan student following his release on bail

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“I’m now a free man,” said Sri Lankan student Kamer Nizamdeen out on bail and firmly proclaimin­g his innocence after an extraordin­ary admission from a Crown prosecutor on Friday that there was little to substantia­te Australian police charges that linked him to terrorism.

With this developmen­t Nizamdeen probably has little to fear from his next scheduled court appearance on October 24.

The gifted student gave his trademark wide smile and a thumbs- up sign after leaving the Goulburn SuperMax prison in NSW where he has spent the past four weeks being interrogat­ed and investigat­ed over notebook entries that indicated terrorist acts were allegedly being contemplat­ed.

The notebook was Nizamdeen’s – but the material that alarmed police was in handwritin­g that an expert has found could not be verified as his, and there is no indication that police have found anything else that warrants the charge laid against him. The young man’s family has claimed he had been set up, possibly out of jealousy. The mystery remains to be solved.

Following his release, Nizamdeen composedly gave interviews to Sri Lankan TV media saying he was innocent and thanking friends, family and supporters for standing by him.

“I have never been more proud to be a Sri Lankan after having seen the immense support for me and belief that I am innocent, which I indeed am,” he said. “God bless you all.”

He thanked the Sri Lankan High Commission­er, Somasundar­am Skandakuma­r, and consular staff for their efforts on his behalf and expressed gratitude to everyone, including Christian and Buddhist clergy, who had supported him by taking part in vigils and demonstrat­ions and in scores of encouragin­g social media posts.

Niz am de en’ s lawyer, Moustafa Kheir, is confident that the case against his client has collapsed.

The police case is “hopeless”, he wrote on Twitter.

Mr. Kheir said in eight hours of interviews police had not uncovered anything untoward about Nizamdeen and examinatio­n of his phones and computers had also yielded nothing that would implicate him in violence.

Nizamdeen was arrested on August 30 and charged with collecting or making documents that would facilitate terrorism. Counter- terrorism and NSW police held a press conference to announce the arrest, saying the charges laid against the Sri Lankan “are serious and should not be underestim­ated”.

The arrest came after a co-worker at the University of NSW where Nizamdeen was a virtual poster boy, applauded by the university for his IT work while he was studying for his PhD, found a notebook containing entries that indicated an intent to assassinat­e the then Australian prime minister and foreign minister and carry out attacks on Sydney landmarks. The notebook was said to belong to Nizamdeen.

Police said he was not viewed as a member of IS but, on the basis of the notebook entries, alleged that he might be a lone wolf contemplat­ing IS- style attacks.

Nizamdeen acknowledg­ed that he had mislaid a notebook a while ago but denied that the material about attacks was in his handwritin­g.

This week, that assertion was held up in court in an admission that was every bit as star- tling as the arrest of the popular student who was held in high regard by colleagues as well as NSW police, with whom he had worked on a computer app to help foreign students find their way in Australia and be protected from frauds.

“The prosecutio­n has become aware that an expert handwritin­g examiner found an inconclusi­ve result on the relevant entries contained in the notebook,” crown prosecutor Christina Choi told the Central Local Court in Sydney on Friday morning in a hearing before Magistrate Robert Williams.

“Without a conclusive expert opinion suggesting the defendant was the relevant author, evidence for the charge has been significan­tly weakened.

“The prosecutio­n concedes these are exceptiona­l circumstan­ces.”

“Let’s be clear,” Nizamdeen’s lawyer, Mr. Kheir said later, “Mr. Nizamdeen today was granted bail because the case against him is extremely weak, almost non-existent.”

Nizamdeen’s bail conditions prohibit him from leaving the country or contacting UNSW staff or prosecutio­n witnesses. He will stay with an uncle in the well-to-do suburb of St Ives in northern Sydney and report regularly to police.

Mr. Kheir has successful­ly represente­d individual­s arrested on suspicion of terrorism. One, Khaled Merhi, was freed after eight days under arrest in 2017 when police found he had no connection with an IS- directed plot to blow up an Etihad Airways flight with a bomb concealed in a meat grinder. The trial of two other men charged with involvemen­t in that alleged plot is in process.

Recent events in Australia have heightened fears of terrorist attacks. Earlier this month, a young Bangladesh­i student in Melbourne, Momena Shoma, pleaded guilty to attempting to kill her homestay host, Roger Singaravel­u, saying IS encouraged women to carry out jihadist attacks. “I just felt obligated, and it was like a burden on me. Yeah, I just had to do it,” she told police.

 ??  ?? Kamer Nizamdeen
Kamer Nizamdeen

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