Tag: Sydney

  • Parramatta Shooting – Australian Police Search Mosque In Shooting Investigation

    Parramatta Shooting – Australian Police Search Mosque In Shooting Investigation

    The Parramatta Mosque has been searched, a senior police source has told the ABC, as investigations into Friday’s fatal shooting of a civilian police force employee continue.

    Farhad Jabar Khalil Mohammad, 15, shot and killed 17-year police force veteran Curtis Cheng at close range outside the Parramatta police headquarters.

    A senior police source told the ABC Farhad attended a mosque shortly before the shooting.

    The mosque believed to have been searched overnight is a few blocks away from the site of the shooting that killed Mr Cheng, 58, as he left work at 4:30pm on Friday.

    A senior figure at the Parramatta mosque has confirmed that police searched the mosque to look for a black backpack which they believe Farhad used to carry the gun he used to kill Mr Cheng.

    Police said the warrant was undertaken by arrangement with leadership at the mosque, who gave their full assistance to police.

    Earlier, a police source said the teenager had been armed with a revolver and did not know Mr Cheng.

    After shooting Mr Cheng, Farhad fired at officers who emerged from the building to respond to the incident, but was killed when special constables returned fire.

    Earlier, senior law enforcement sources said it appeared the teenager had acted alone.

    “The people there (at the mosque) went looking for him after prayer,” one source said.

    “There is a fair bit of information that he acted alone.”

    They said after prayer he changed into a black robe.

    Neil El-Kadomi from the Parramatta Mosque said Farhad visited the building in the past on occasion but he did not know him by name.

    “Because he was very quiet nobody noticed him,” Mr El-Kadomi said.

    “He’s not known in the mosque. He came to the mosque to heal himself before he did the crime, which is wrong.”

    Mr El-Kadomi said the mosque had nothing to do with the shooting and did not condone it.

    “The boy, he did it alone. He died and his motive died with him,” he said.

    “You have to be an active person in society, you have to join others in building Australia.

    “So, we don’t agree with what happened in Parramatta.

    “We’ve got nothing to do with it and I hate the linking of the mosque with the crime.”

    Shooter’s relative tipped off police

    The ABC was told by a senior police source that it was the older brother of the Parramatta shooter who tipped off them off about the identity of Farhad.

    It is also understood Farhad’s sister Shadi went missing on Thursday and flew out of Australia on a Singapore Airlines flight bound for Istanbul, and may be attempting to reach Iraq or Syria.

    Her family told police she had taken all her belongings.

    Police searched Farhad’s North Parramatta home and confiscated computer equipment.

    ABC’s police source said the youth had been “carrying on” outside police headquarters for a few minutes before the shooting.

    “He drew attention to himself to the extent some people caught it on their iPhones,” they said.

    The gunman walked past a plain clothes female detective.

    “She was wearing a business suit and she wasn’t carrying a gun,” a source said.

    “This poor bloke [the victim] was apparently the first one to walk out of the building — he had a connection to the police force — that was it.”

    Foreign Minister Julie Bishop said Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull and NSW Premier Mike Baird have been holding talks with Muslim community leaders following the shooting.

    Ms Bishop said the issue of radicalisation must be addressed.

    “So we’re certainly reaching out to the leaders of the Muslim community … but working with the families at a grassroots local level … it’s the families that will be a frontline of defence against radicalised young people … so we will be working very closely with them,” she said.

    The ABC’s Fran Kelly told the Insiders program that a phone hook-up between “the Premier, the Police Commissioner and the Prime Minister with seven or eight members of the Muslim community” took place last night.

    She said Mr Turnbull used the phone call to convey the message that “we have a remarkably cohesive society, respect is key to that and [urged] everyone to work together to expose preachers of hate”.

    The ABC understands the community leaders were impressed by the move and communicated their willingness to work with governments. One leader said the conversation reset the relationship.

    Muslim community leaders said they were shocked by the tragic shooting of Mr Cheng.

    They called for more to be done to stop extremist leaders from recruiting vulnerable youths.

    Sydney Muslim community leader Ahmad El-Hage said the Government only acted when extremist thoughts turn into acts of violence.

    “And we tell them this is not correct we need to act way before that,” he said.

    Mr El-Hage said the Government needed to focus on the extremist leaders rather than the young people they target.

    Youth worker Sheikh Wesam Charkawi, who works with high school boys to counter radical ideas, said the acts of one person should not reflect upon the broader Muslim community.

    He also said some of the youth he worked with feel marginalised.

    “Some of them in their families feel that there’s a disconnect, some of them come from broken families and so there is an array of issues that can lead to criminality,” Mr Charkawi said.

    He said despite youth being impressionable and often naive, nothing could justify what the shooter did.

    Relative known to police and counter-terrorism authorities

    As part of their investigation, police are now trying to trace the ownership and history of the revolver used by Farhad in the attack.

    The ABC has been told the youth had never come to the attention of police.

    “We don’t know anything about him,” the source said.

    But it is understood a relative was known to law enforcement or intelligence agencies.

    “[The relative] was a bit of a problem, he did come to the attention of police and counter-terrorism [authorities],” a source said.

    One source confirmed the teenager was a Sunni Muslim who was born in Iran.

    He said he was of Iraqi-Kurdish background and may have been a refugee.

    “It is interesting he is a Kurd, the Kurds are among those bearing the brunt of ISIS, it doesn’t make any sense,” the source said.

     

    Source:www.abc.net.au

     

  • Sydney Siege Gunman Identified As Self-Styled Islamic State Preacher Sheik Haron Monis

    Sydney Siege Gunman Identified As Self-Styled Islamic State Preacher Sheik Haron Monis

    He is Sheik Man Haron Monis, who is a self-styled preacher of Islamic State on bail for accessory to murder.

    Monis, 50, died at the end of a 16-hour siege at the cafe early this morning, but was no stranger to Australian authorities.

    He first came to public notice in 2010 when he faced charges for sending offensive letters to the families of two Australian soldiers who died in Afghanistan – and the family of a trade official, Craig Senger, who died in the 2009 Jakarta bombing.

    As a result, he was convicted of 12 counts of using a postal service to cause offence, ordered to perform 300 hours of community service and placed on a two-year good behaviour bond.

    Monis was banned from sending similar letters to the relatives of British soldiers, but claimed in court at the time the condition was a breach of his freedom of speech.

    Monis’ former lawyer Manny Conditsis describes him as a “damaged goods individual” with an ideology that clouds his common sense.

    Monis was also accused of being an accessory to his ex-wife’s murder and faced charges on 40 offences relating to the indecent and sexual assault of several women in 2002.

    He was granted bail and was set to reappear in court in February 2015.

     

    Source: www.sbs.com.au

  • Sydney Siege Ended After Australian Police Storm Cafe

    Sydney Siege Ended After Australian Police Storm Cafe

    SYDNEY – Heavily armed Australian police stormed a Sydney cafe early on Tuesday morning and freed a number of hostages being held there at gunpoint, in a dramatic end to a 16-hour siege in which three people including the attacker were killed.

    Police have not publicly identified the gunman but a police source named him as Man Haron Monis, an Iranian refugee and self-styled sheikh known for sending hate mail to the families of Australian troops killed in Afghanistan. He was charged last year with being an accessory to the murder of his ex-wife, but had been free on bail.

    Several videos apparently showing hostages inside the Lindt cafe in Sydney’s central business district making demands on behalf of Monis were posted on social media during the siege.

    The gunman, whom the frightened hostages referred to as “brother”, demanded to talk to Prime Minister Tony Abbott, the delivery of an Islamic State flag, and that media broadcast that Australia was under attack by Islamic State.

    Abbott said the gunman was well known to authorities and had a history of extremism and mental instability.

    Around 2 a.m. local time (10.00 a.m. ET on Monday), at least six people believed to have been held captive in the cafe managed to flee after gunshots were heard coming from inside.

    Police then moved in, with heavy gunfire and blasts from stun grenades echoing from the building.

    “They made the call because they believed at that time if they didn’t enter there would have been many more lives lost,” said Andrew Scipione, police commissioner for the state of New South Wales.

    An investigation would determine whether hostages were killed by the gunman or died in cross-fire, Scipione told reporters just before dawn.

    CAFE MANAGER, BARRISTER KILLED

    Police said a 50-year-old man, believed to be the attacker, was killed. Television pictures showed he appeared to have been armed with a sawn-off shotgun.

    A man aged 34 and a 38-year-old woman were also killed, police said. The man was the cafe manager and the woman was a mother and lawyer, Sydney media reported. Four were wounded, including a policeman hit in the face with shotgun pellets.

    Medics tried to resuscitate at least one person after the raid and took away several wounded people on gurneys, a Reuters witness said. Bomb squad members moved in to search for explosives, but none were found.

    So far 17 hostages have been accounted for, including at least five others who were released or escaped on Monday.

    The area near the cafe remained cordoned off on Tuesday morning, with bystanders and passing office workers leaving flowers under police tape. Flags flew at half mast across the country.

    Leaders from around the world had expressed their concern over the siege, including Stephen Harper, the prime minister of Canada, which suffered an attack on its parliament by a suspected jihadist sympathizer in October.

    NO LINKS TO TERROR GROUPS

    Monis was found guilty in 2012 of sending threatening letters to the families of eight Australian soldiers killed in Afghanistan as a protest against Australia’s involvement there. He was also facing more than 40 sexual assault charges.

    “He had a long history of violent crime, infatuation with extremism and mental instability,” Abbott told reporters in Canberra. The prime minister did not identify the gunman.

    New South Wales Premier Mike Baird declined to comment when asked by a journalist whether it was appropriate for Monis to be free on bail.

    A U.S. security official said the U.S. government was being advised by Australia that there was no sign at this stage that the gunman was connected to known terrorist organizations.

    Although the hostage taker was known to the authorities, security experts said preventing attacks by people acting alone could be difficult.

    “We are entering a new phase of terrorism that is far more dangerous and more difficult to defeat than al Qaeda ever was,” ​said Cornell University law professor Jens David Ohlin, speaking in New York.

    Australia, a staunch ally of the United States and its escalating action against Islamic State in Syria and Iraq, has been on high alert for attacks by home-grown militants returning from fighting in the Middle East or their supporters.

    News footage showed hostages in the cafe holding up a black and white flag displaying the Shahada, a testament to the faith of Muslims. The flag has been popular among Sunni Islamist militant groups such as Islamic State and al Qaeda.

    The incident forced the evacuation of nearby buildings and sent shockwaves around a country where many people were turning their attention to the Christmas holiday.

    In September, anti-terrorism police said they had thwarted an imminent threat to behead a random member of the public and, days later, a teenager in the city of Melbourne was shot dead after attacking two anti-terrorism officers with a knife.

    The siege cafe is in Martin Place, a pedestrian strip popular with workers on their lunch break, which was revealed as a potential location for the thwarted beheading.

    Muslim leaders urged calm. The Australian National Imams Council condemned “this criminal act unequivocally” in a joint statement with the Grand Mufti of Australia. REUTERS

     

    Source: www.todayonline.com