Australian counter-terrorism force arrests seven teenagers after Sydney bishop stabbing

A bishop was stabbed during a church service at Christ The Good Shepherd Church in Sydney, Australia, on April 15. PHOTO: REUTERS

SYDNEY – An Australian counter-terrorism team arrested seven teenagers on April 24 who were linked to a boy charged with a religiously motivated terror attack on a Sydney bishop, and questioned another five people.

The police said a team of more than 400 police and security personnel were involved in the operation, which arrested associates of a 16-year-old boy charged with a terrorism offence for the knifing of Assyrian Bishop Mar Mari Emmanuel during a live-streamed church service on April 15.

The police said they took the teens into custody because they posed an “unacceptable risk” to society. They will allege the teens believed in a religiously motivated violent extremist ideology. A further five people are being questioned by the police.

“I can assure the community there is no ongoing threat to the community, and the action we have taken today has mitigated any risk of future or further harm,” said New South Wales state Police Deputy Commissioner David Hudson at a news conference following the arrests.

The police said in a statement that the operation was ongoing.

Coming only days after a deadly mass stabbing in Bondi, the attack on the bishop and fears of further attacks or reprisals against the city’s Muslim community have put the normally peaceful Sydney on edge. Gun and knife crime is rare in the city, one of the world’s safest.

The Joint Counter Terrorism Team operation, which involved 13 raids in Sydney and the regional town of Goulburn, was a combined effort between the state and federal police as well as the domestic intelligence agency.

A significant amount of electronic material was seized in the raids, the police said in a statement.

Australia’s top domestic spy chief on April 23 asked technology companies to give it access to user messages in limited circumstances so it could fight extremists. REUTERS

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