The one person arrested as part of a raid involving hundreds of police has now been shot dead by the police and we are supposed to take the word of the authorities that someone held in custody was going to behead policemen.
Yeah, right!
Mr Abbott will have his 'anti-terror' legislation and have terrorised the public. All very convenient.
Melbourne terror shooting: Numan Haider 'planned to behead Victoria Police officers, drape bodies in IS flag'
Yeah, right!
Mr Abbott will have his 'anti-terror' legislation and have terrorised the public. All very convenient.
Melbourne terror shooting: Numan Haider 'planned to behead Victoria Police officers, drape bodies in IS flag'
Police feared the 18-year-old man shot dead outside the Endeavour Hills police station planned to behead officers and post the images online.
Shooting victim and terror suspect: Numan Haider. Photo: Facebook
SMH,
24
September, 2014
Numan
Haider used a small knife to attack an Australian Federal Police
officer and a Victorian policeman before he was shot dead with a
single shot.
Police
believe the plan was to follow instructions from the international
terror group Islamic State and behead the officers, cover the bodies
in the flag and then take photos to post via the internet.
He
had been the subject of police investigations for the past three
months as he had become increasingly radical.
Schoolfriends
said he showed no signs of violent behaviour in secondary college.
Police
say he was part of a small group of Islamic Melbourne men who have
been sharing violent hate messages.
His
passport was cancelled as police became concerned, although they
chose to meet him outside a police station to avoid inflaming the
situation.
"No
one was aware what was in his mind," a senior policeman said.
Meanwhile,
the head of an Islamic group linked to Mr Haider would not confirm
whether he had been involved with the controversial al-Furqan Islamic
Centre in Springvale South.
Harun
Mehicevic, also known as Abu Talha, spoke to Fairfax Media near the
centre, the focus of a large counter-terrorism operation in 2012.
Mr
Mehicevic declined to comment about Mr Haider, or the Endeavour Hills
shooting, saying the group might release a media statement later on
Wednesday. It has been reported that Mr Haider spent time with the
group.
In
2012, it appeared al-Furqan members were suspected of involvement in
extremist activity, including fund-raising for rebel forces in Syria.
It
is unclear whether Mr Mehicevic has been caught up in recent
wide-ranging cancellations of passports by authorities, given he was
in his native Bosnia when the raids occurred in 2012 and was allowed
to return freely to Australia.
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