Thursday, May 30, 2013

Sheikhs in Sydney's Al Risalah book store encouraging young Muslims to fight ... - ABC Online


Updated May 30, 2013 23:10:30


A 7.30 investigation has uncovered a secretive and radical program operating inside an Islamic book store in western Sydney, which is encouraging young Muslims to fight in Syria.


The concerns of authorities have been heightened by the bloody conflict in Syria, which has become a magnet and a new training ground for militants around the world, including in Australia.


ASIO has estimated around 100 Australians could be currently fighting in Syria.


Four Australians have so far died in the conflict. Questions have been asked as to whether they were providing humanitarian relief or if they were also fighting at the front line against the brutal Assad regime.


Their families maintain they weren't fighting and were there to aid the humanitarian effort by helping the maimed and wounded, including women and children caught in the crossfire.


Since it opened just over a year ago, the Al Risalah bookstore has gained a reputation as a centre of Islamic extremism.


Community leaders like Jamal Dahoud are concerned about what is taking place.


"The Al Risalah bookstore especially is very secretive, very secret," he said. "They conduct their business in a very secret way.


"I tried to explore who is behind this group - we can't."


7.30 has been investigating Al Risalah's activities and the people behind it, identifying four key sheikhs.


All are radical and all are encouraging Australians to get involved in the Syrian crisis.


The most famous of the sheikhs is Abu Suhaib, known to authorities as Bilal Khazal.


Khazal is a former baggage handler for Qantas, trained at a military camp in Afghanistan, and was a confidant of Osama Bin Laden.


He was lecturing at Al Risalah in 2012 until he was convicted and sentenced to nine years in jail for producing a do-it-yourself terrorism book.


The possibility that militant sheikhs are radicalising youth at home - before they go to Syria - has Australian authorities on high alert.


The head of the New South Wales Police counter-terrorism unit told 7.30 they are aware of Al Risalah.


"I am aware of some of activities that go on there and some of the individuals involved," said Deputy Commissioner Nick Kaldas.


He said federal authorities are "very much involved in some of the issues" raised by 7.30.


"It's a matter of us sitting down with our colleagues in the federal sphere and then working out where we go from there, but there has to be tangible evidence and it has to be available to the police," he said.


Deputy Commissioner Kaldas said it is "not advisable" to encourage people to partake in the Syrian war.


"Sending people into a war zone is something that's quite heartless and quite selfish," he said.


"I have to say for someone to be advocating for someone to go and fight in a war but are not prepared to do it themselves tells me something about those who are advocating that."


Attorney-General Mark Dreyfus says Australians fighting in Syria could be breaking at least three laws, including the Foreign Incursions Act, which makes it an offence for Australians to participate in this kind of civil war.


Mr Dreyfus also holds concerns that Australians would return from the conflict having been further radicalised.


"Clearly there is a radicalisation that's involved in wanting to participate in this military and violent activity," he said.


"There is a concern before people go, but there is also a concern when they return - as the director-general of ASIO has spoken about.


"If you've gone to Syria, participated in the conflict there - particularly with a terrorist group - and then returned to Australia, it's likely you'll return with terrorist ideology [and] with more knowledge."


Topics: islam, religion-and-beliefs, unrest-conflict-and-war, sydney-2000, nsw, australia, syrian-arab-republic


First posted May 30, 2013 22:06:50



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