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Terrorism in Australia

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Islam-related terrorism organisations

File:ASIO logo.jpg
The official crest of the Australian Security Intelligence Organisation. Acting upon the advice of ASIO and Australian courts, 18 of 19 terrorist organisations officially listed by the Australian government claim association with Islam, Islamising goals or Islamic ideology. The remaining organisation is the Kurdistan Workers Party.

In 2002, a range of terrorist organisation offences were enacted enabling Australian governments to deal with organisations involved in terrorism.

As at early April 2007, there were 19 organisations listed as terrorist organisations by the Australian government. All but one of those organisations are associated to Islamic ideology:

For listing, an organisation may be found to be such by a court as part of a prosecution for a terrorist offence or the same may be specified in regulations upon the motion of the Attorney-General of Australia.

Under Australian law it is an offence to materially support or be supported by such organisations.

Australian Islamic terrorists

Muhammad Dawood, pre-2001 photograph

Muhammad Dawood, also known as 'David Hicks' or 'Abu Muslim al-Austraili', is an Australian national who publicly admitted his role in providing material support to terrorism in March 2007 as a collaborator with al-Qaeda. He is serving a sentence of seven years imprisonment, presently at Guantanamo Bay detention camp.

Mamdouh Habib

Mamdouh Habib

Mamdouh Habib (Arabic: ممدوح حبيب) is an Australian Muslim formerly incarcerated at Guantanamo Bay on suspicion of involvement in terrorism.

He traveled to New York City, USA, prior to the 1993 World Trade Center bombing. At that time he visited Sheikh Omar Abdel Rahman, a person notorious for issing a death fatwa against Anwar Sadat, and later sentenced to life imprisonment for attacking US targets including conspiratorial responsibility for the 1993 World Trade Center bombing.

He was arrested in October 2001 while traveling by bus to Karachi, Pakistan. It is alleged that while he was in Afghanistan, he took an advanced al-Qaeda training course in a camp near Kabul. It is claimed the course included surveillance and photographing facilities, the establishment and use of safe houses, covert travel and writing secret reports. Australian authorities say that several other men who took part in the course identified him as having been there. Evidence to support these claims has not been made public.

In interviews he has refused to confirm whether he was in Afghanistan.

Offshore fatalaties and incidents

There have been significant numbers of Australians killed or seriously wounded as a result of Islamic terrorism in Indonesia since late 2002.

File:021018 bali bombing.jpg
National flags at Kuta explosion site (October 17, 2002)

In October 2002 three near-simultaneous bomb detonations in the tourist district of Kuta on the island of Bali killed 88 Australians. 209 people were injured, also including Australians.

Various members of Jemaah Islamiyah were convicted for their roles in planning and excuting the bombings with three sentenced to death and another to life imprisonment. Abu Bakar Bashir, a muslim cleric and identified spiritual leader of Jemaah Islamiyah, was found guilty of conspiratorial responsibility and sentenced to two and a half years imprisonment.

Bombs exploded at two sites in Jimbaran and Kuta, both in south Bali, in early October 2005. Four Australians were killed and 19 were injured.

Alleged Sydney-Melbourne terrorist ring

As of early March 2007 nine men charged with Australia's largest terrorist conspiracy were undergoing commital hearings at Penrith for alleged crimes associated with a plan to attack Sydney's Lucas Heights Nuclear Reactor.

The men have been in a maximum security jail since 2005 when police and security agencies raided homes in Sydney and Melbourne, arresting a total of 18 men.

Nine men face terrorism charges in Melbourne.

Police allege the Sydney men had been urged by their Muslim cleric leader to inflict maximum damage for the sake of jihad.

Police said the men had attended terrorist training camps in Australia, stockpiled chemicals to make explosives and that one of them was found with 165 railway detonators at his home.

The hearing is expected to run for two months.

See also

Notes

  1. http://www.comlaw.gov.au/comlaw/Legislation/Act1.nsf/0/3FE76064F1487C39CA25722D00069043/$file/065-2002.doc The Security Legislation Amendment (Terrorism) Act 2002 - Australian federal legislation.
  2. http://www.nationalsecurity.gov.au/agd/WWW/NationalSecurity.nsf/Page/What_Governments_are_doingListing_of_Terrorism_Organisations
  3. url=http://tkb.org/Group.jsp?groupID=204, title=Abu Sayyaf Group (ASG), publisher=MIPT Terrorism Knowledge Base
  4. http://www.ag.gov.au/agd/WWW/ministerruddockhome.nsf/Page/Media_Releases_2007_First_Quarter_0312007_-_19_February_2007_-_Re-listing_of_Al-Zarqawi_(tanzim_qa&apos
  5. United States Department of State. "Asbat al-Ansar)". Retrieved 2006-07-20. {{cite web}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |1= (help)
  6. Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan MIPT Terrorism Knowledge Base
  7. Lashkar-e-Toiba,BBC
  8. The Age newspaper ""Bashir's release a cause of great pain."". Retrieved 2006-09-19.
  9. http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/03/06/AR2007030600686.html
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