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Melbourne men could face life in prison after alleged plot to sail tinnie to Indonesia Melbourne men charged over alleged plot to sail tinnie to Indonesia
(about 3 hours later)
Five Melbourne men who allegedly wanted to use a small fishing boat to reach Indonesia and join Islamic State in Syria have been charged with terrorism-related offences.Five Melbourne men who allegedly wanted to use a small fishing boat to reach Indonesia and join Islamic State in Syria have been charged with terrorism-related offences.
The men, including Islamic preacher Musa Cerantonio, were arrested near Cairns on Tuesday towing a seven-metre fishing boat en route to Cape York in far North Queensland. The men, including Islamic preacher Musa Cerantonio, were arrested near Cairns on Tuesday towing a seven-metre “tinnie”, or dinghy, en route to Cape York in far North Queensland.
Police on Sunday said they had been charged with one count each of making preparations for incursions into foreign countries to engage in hostile activities and could face life in prison if convicted. Related: Suspects in alleged dinghy plot will be held for another 72 hours
Related: Police foil alleged jihadi plot to sail dinghy from Australia to Indonesia They were charged after four days in custody with one count each of making preparations for incursions into foreign countries to engage in hostile activities and could face life in prison if convicted.
The five, aged between 21 and 31, and who remain in custody, are due to appear in Cairns magistrates court on Monday. The five, aged between 21 and 31, are due to appear in Cairns magistrates court on Monday. They include the alleged Isis sympathiser Cerantonio, Shayden Thorne and Kadir Kaya, who allegedly told Melbourne radio after his passport was revoked in October that Australia was “an open-air prison”.
The Australian federal police assistant commissioner, Neil Gaughan, said after their arrest they had been under investigation for a “number of weeks” and were “obviously very committed”. The attorney general, George Brandis, said on Sunday that despite the “unusual character to the [alleged] plot” the government did not “take this lightly”.
Among those arrested are the alleged Isis sympathiser Musa Cerantonio, Shayden Thorne, who was imprisoned in Saudi Arabia for allegedly possessing terrorist literature, and Kadir Kaya, who allegedly told Melbourne radio after his passport was revoked in October that Australia was “an open-air prison”. “I know ... elements of the media have ridiculed it, but of course it’s not to be taken lightly,” he told a media conference in Brisbane. “It’s a crime carrying a penalty of life imprisonment after all [if convicted].”
The attorney general, George Brandis, said on Thursday the men had allegedly been planning to sail the boat to Indonesia en route to the Syrian war zone, where they hoped to commit “hostile acts”. Brandis said the men had been “under surveillance for quite some time” and had their passports cancelled months ago.
He said the charging of the men on Saturday night, after they were held in custody without charge for four days, was a result of both “evidence police had obtained prior to the men being arrested, as well as what was learned during the course of those investigations subsequent to arrest”.
“The police formed a view there was sufficient basis to charge the men, and that’s why they were charged last night,” he said.
The men are expected to be extradited to Victoria, where they are alleged to have bought the boat and made the bulk of other preparations to leave the country. Brandis said such extraditions were usually swift.
The Australian federal police assistant commissioner Neil Gaughan said they had been under investigation for a “number of weeks”.
Australian Associated Press contributed to this report