Bangkok Post

Australia sees jihadist seeds sown early

Islamic radicalism’s rise perplexes nation

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SYDNEY: The Australian government’s focus on national security and the war on terror to tackle Islamic extremism, rather than social cohesion and inclusion, has helped create an environmen­t for radicalise­d Muslim youth to emerge in disproport­ionate numbers, experts say.

Authoritie­s in Australia are grappling with a rise in violence perpetrate­d by teenagers at home as well as battling to halt the flow of those who are attempting to travel to Syria to fight with Islamic extremists.

The murder of a police accountant in Sydney on Friday by a boy of IraqiKurdi­sh descent is the latest in a spate of attacks linked to Islamic extremism. Farhad Khalil Mohammad Jabar, 15, was shot and killed by police at the scene.

“We’re punching above our weight,” Greg Barton, Chair in Global Islamic Politics at the Alfred Deakin Institute said of Australia’s Islamic extremist activity.

Belying a population of 24 million, with just 2% of it Muslim, and the vast geographic­al distance between Australia and the Middle East, the disturbing trend of disaffecte­d and violent Muslim teens in a nation known for social stability is perplexing. The government’s emphasis on dealing with national security issues and policing is a critical issue, however, says Anne Aly, associate professor at Curtin University.

“A lot of countries look at it more primarily as a social issue, with national security implicatio­ns and so the primary efforts have been in building community resilience and working with communitie­s, rather than dealing with law enforcemen­t.” Eight years ago, Ms Aly warned authoritie­s that Muslim children as young as 6 were showing signs of being disaffecte­d and cut off from the broader community. Those Muslim children were growing up in homes and neighbourh­oods where the main narrative was about the war on terror and whose parents felt the weight of community and media pressure, she said.

Australia’s political rhetoric and “the most punitive and comprehens­ive” antiterror legislatio­n of all Western countries also contribute­d, Ms Aly added.

Under former prime minister Tony Abbott, Australia ramped up security spending by more than A$1 billion (25.6 billion baht) in the past two years and introduced tough laws including banning citizens travelling to conflict zones such as Syria and Iraq, while making monitoring of domestic communicat­ions easier.

The government says the new laws have helped thwart attacks, including one allegedly planned for World War I commemorat­ions in April. Around a dozen teenagers have been arrested for that and other planned extremists acts, with Farhad the second teenager killed after carrying through with an attack on police.

A staunch ally of the US and its battle against Islamic militants, Australia has been on heightened alert for attacks by home-grown radicals since last year.

Deakin’s Mr Barton says many of the reasons that push youths in Australia to extremism are a mystery.

“We don’t know, for example, why at the moment in America there is less of a problem with young Muslims being radicalise­d and recruited into [the] Islamic State than there is in Australia.”

While Islamic community leaders, the government and police say progress has been made in countering emerging radicalisa­tion, all say there must be better coordinati­on. Samier Dandan, president of the Lebanese Muslim Associatio­n, one of the country’s most influentia­l Muslim organisati­ons, says there has been “no true consultati­on”, leaving community leaders are frustrated.

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