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A police officer stands guard outside a property in Melbourne. Photo EPA-EFE

Three men found guilty of 2016 Christmas terror plot in Melbourne

  • The men bought machetes and the ingredients to make home-made bombs, and wanted to target major sites including a railway station and a church
  • Ibrahim Abbas had told the court he ‘wanted to make sure that the casualties would be high’, saying ‘the bigger the better’
Australia

Three young men have been found guilty of plotting terror attacks in Australia’s second-largest city, intending to inflict mass casualties during the Christmas festive season.

The court was told the men – Hamza Abbas, 23; Ahmed Mohamed, 25; and Abdullah Chaarani, 27 – bought machetes and ingredients to make home-made bombs, and wanted to target major Melbourne sites including a railway station and a church.

The verdict came as Australians were reeling from last Friday’s Islamic State-inspired knife attack and attempted car bombing in Melbourne, which left two dead including the attacker.

One dead, multiple injured in Melbourne rush-hour stabbing rampage

Hamza Abbas’ older brother Ibrahim Abbas pleaded guilty earlier this year to the Christmas plot, which was to have been carried out in December 2016.

The bigger the better. The bigger the more terror is achieved, and that’s the point
Ibrahim Abbas, terror plotter

The Supreme Court of Victoria jury decision was handed down in early November but could not be published until Wednesday after the lifting of suppression orders.

Ibrahim Abbas had told the court he “wanted to make sure that the casualties would be high”, Melbourne’s Herald Sun reported.

“The bigger the better. The bigger the more terror is achieved, and that’s the point.”

Police uncovered the plot after monitoring the Australian-born men’s phone conversations, text messages and emails, and all four were arrested on December 22, 2016.

Prosecutors had also alleged a link to the al-Qaeda magazine Inspire’s article “How to make a bomb in the kitchen of your mother”, which was found on one of the men’s phones.

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Then-Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull called their plans “one of the most substantial terrorist plots that have been disrupted over the last several years”.

Authorities say more than a dozen terrorist attacks have been prevented in recent years, but several have taken place, including a cafe siege in Sydney in 2014 where two hostages were killed.

The men will be sentenced at a later date, and face life imprisonment.

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