Australian militants ‘planned to behead random person’

Over 800 police involved in pre-dawn raids, described as largest in Australian history

A man detained by police during a raid sits on the ground in Sydney. Intelligence showed that militants connected with Islamic State were planning to behead a member of the public in Australia, Prime Minister Tony Abbott said today. Photograph: Australian Federal Police/Reuters
A man detained by police during a raid sits on the ground in Sydney. Intelligence showed that militants connected with Islamic State were planning to behead a member of the public in Australia, Prime Minister Tony Abbott said today. Photograph: Australian Federal Police/Reuters

Militants connected with radical group Islamic State were planning to behead a member of the public, Australian prime minister Tony Abbott said today, after hundreds of police raided homes in a sweeping counter-terrorism operation.

Mr Abbott said there was a "serious risk from a terrorist attack" days after Australia raised its national terror threat level to "high" for the first time, citing the likelihood of attacks by Australians radicalised in Iraq or Syria.

Australia is concerned over the number of its citizens believed to be fighting overseas with militant groups, including a suicide bomber who killed three people in Baghdad in July and two men shown in images on social media holding the severed heads of Syrian soldiers.

More than 800 police were involved in the pre-dawn security operation in Sydney and Brisbane, which was described as the largest in Australian history and resulted in the detention of 15 people, police said.

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Mr Abbott told a news conference members of the radical group had planned to conduct a public beheading. “That’s the intelligence we received,” he said.

Media reported that the plans included snatching a person at random in Sydney, Australia’s largest city, and executing them on camera draped in the group’s black flag.

“The exhortations, quite direct exhortations, were coming from an Australian who is apparently quite senior in ISIL to networks of support back in Australia to conduct demonstration killings here in this country,” Mr Abbott said, referring to the group otherwise known as Islamic State that has seized large areas of territory in Syria and Iraq.

Sydney man Omarjan Azari (22), appeared in court after the raids. He has been charged with conspiracy to commit a terrorist act and will remain in custody until a hearing in November, authorities said.

Prosecutor Michael Allnutt told the court in Sydney an attack was being planned that “was clearly designed to shock and horrify, perhaps terrify” the community.

Mr Azari’s lawyer, Steven Boland, did not apply for bail. Mr Boland told the court the allegation was based on one phone call, according to media reports. Police said the raids were focused in western Sydney and the Queensland state capital of Brisbane, where two men were arrested on terrorism-related charges last week.

About half of Australia’s population of roughly 500,000 Muslims lives in Sydney, with the majority in the western suburbs where the raids occurred.

Osama Farah, a 40-year-old university student, said the raids were part and parcel of the Australian media’s unfair portrayal of Muslims as fanatics. “There are idiots everywhere. Jews, Christians, Muslims, everywhere. They must take things to the extreme because they are sick in their heart,” he said. “But to take this tiny portion of the population ... it’s unfair.”

Samier Dandan, president of the Lebanese Muslim Association, one of the country’s most influential Muslim organisations, said the raids had the potential to inflame relations between the authorities and the community. “I hope they have very solid facts, because if they don‘t, this is going to be the basic platform from which the community engages with law enforcement moving forward from here,” he said.

Up to 160 Australians have either been involved in fighting in the Middle East or actively supporting it, officials have said. At least 20 are believed to have returned to Australia and pose a security risk, the head of the national spy agency said last week.

Highlighting the risk of homegrown militants returning from the Middle East, Mr Abbott pledged on Sunday to send a 600-strong force as well as strike aircraft to join a US-led coalition fighting Islamic State militants in Iraq.

Reuters