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Published 19 Apr, 2015 07:40am

Police foil attack on WWI centenary event

SYDNEY: Two men were arrested in Melbourne on Saturday for allegedly planning an IS-inspired attack at Anzac Day commemorations honouring soldiers who fought and died for Australia during the World War One — the country’s most important national event.

Seven search warrants were executed in the country’s second largest city by a joint counter-terrorism team of 200 officers, two months after Prime Minister Tony Abbott warned the threat from home-grown extremists was worsening.

Police said two 18-year-olds were held over terrorism-related offences with one of them, Sevdet Besim, charged. He appeared briefly in court accused of conspiring to commit a terrorist act and was remanded in custody.

“It is alleged both men were undertaking preparations for planning terrorist acts in Melbourne, which included targeting police officers”, Victoria state and federal police said in a joint statement.

“Part of their alleged planning included targeting an Anzac Day ceremony”. Ceremonies are due to be held in towns and cities across the country on April 25 to remember those who served as Australian and New Zealand Army Corps soldiers.

This year’s events have assumed added significance with the day marking a century since the bloody World War I Gallipoli campaign in what is now Turkey.

More than 60,000 Australian and New Zealand troops joined an Allied expeditionary landing on the peninsula in 1915, and 11,500 of them never returned.

The arrests come just days after Australia began deploying 330 more troops to Iraq for two years to train local soldiers fighting jihadists including the self-styled Islamic State group, joining an aerial and special forces contingent in the region.

A third man held on Saturday, also 18, was arrested on weapons charges with two other teenagers, aged 18 and 19, in custody and assisting with enquiries.

Police said was it believed the attacks would have involved “edged knives”, reportedly including a sword, although there was no direct evidence to suggest a beheading, a killing method favoured by jihadists.

“At this stage we have no information that it was a planned beheading. But there was reference to an attack on police,” Victoria Police Acting Deputy Commissioner Shane Patton told a news conference.

“Some evidence that was collected at a couple of the scenes and some other information we have leads us to believe that this particular matter was ISIS-inspired”.

Published in Dawn, April 19th, 2015

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