Bangkok Post

Australian request to extradite jihadi recruiter denied

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SYDNEY: A Turkish court rejected an Australian request to extradite a citizen it believes is a top recruiter for the Islamic State (IS) group, Australia’s foreign minister said yesterday, in a setback for Canberra’s efforts to prosecute him at home.

Melbourne-born Neil Prakash has been linked to several Australia-based attack plans and has appeared in IS videos and magazines. Australia has alleged that he actively recruited Australian men, women and children and encouraged acts of militancy.

“We are disappoint­ed that the Kilis Criminal Court in Turkey has rejected the request to extradite Neil Prakash to Australia,” Foreign Minister Julie Bishop said in a statement.

“We will continue to engage with Turkish authoritie­s as they consider whether to appeal the extraditio­n decision,” she said.

Australia had been pressing Turkey to extradite Prakash since he was first detained there nearly two years ago.

Australia’s Daily Telegraph newspaper reported from Kilis that Prakash was initially ordered to be freed but was later charged under Turkish law for being an IS member.

A spokesman at Turkey’s foreign ministry in Istanbul had no immediate comment and the Turkish embassy in Australia did not respond immediatel­y to a request for comment.

Ties between Turkey and its allies fighting the IS, particular­ly the United States, have been frayed by Washington’s support for the Syrian Kurdish YPG militia, which Ankara regards as a militant group.

Canberra announced financial sanctions against Prakash in 2015, including anyone giving him financial assistance, with punishment of up to 10 years in jail.

The Australian government wrongly reported in 2016, based on US intelligen­ce, that Prakash had been killed in an air strike in Mosul, Iraq. It later confirmed that Prakash was detained in Turkey.

Australia raised its national terror threat level to “high” for the first time in 2015, citing the likelihood of attacks by Australian­s radicalise­d in Iraq or Syria.

A staunch ally of the United States and its actions against the IS in Syria and Iraq, Australia believes more than 100 of its citizens are fighting in the region.

 ?? AFP ?? A view of the courthouse in Gaziantep where an Australian jihadist went on trial in September 2017 on charges of being a member for the Islamic State extremist group.
AFP A view of the courthouse in Gaziantep where an Australian jihadist went on trial in September 2017 on charges of being a member for the Islamic State extremist group.

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