Three of the four people arrested in Australia over a terror-linked murder by a radicalized teenager have been released without charge in a move police admitted yesterday was “incredibly frustrating.”
The four, aged between 16 and 22, were seized during large-scale dawn raids across Sydney on Wednesday after police employee Curtis Cheng was shot outside the New South Wales state police headquarters last week.
Farhad Jabar, 15, shot the 58-year-old in the back of the head while reportedly shouting religious slogans, before being gunned down in an exchange of fire with police.
The Sydney Morning Herald, citing police sources, said Jabar was allegedly recruited by a group of extremists in western Sydney, who thought they were under too much surveillance to carry out the murder themselves.
New South Wales Police Commissioner Andrew Scipione said it was clear Jabar was radicalized and had “terrorist links,” but there was not enough evidence to hold three of the four men detained. An 18-year-old remains behind bars.
“Only when we have sufficient evidence that can put us in a position where we can charge an offender” can suspects be brought to justice, he told commercial radio station 2GB. “We’ve taken a lot of material during the course of these searches and that’s going to take us a long time to go through... It’s incredibly frustrating for us.”
Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull has said the attack “appears to have been an act of terrorism.”
The Sydney Daily Telegraph reported that two of the four detained were linked to an alleged plot to behead a “non-believer” in Sydney last year ordered by the Islamic State group, which police foiled. It also said CCTV footage from Parramatta Mosque in western Sydney showed Jabar meeting several men in the lead-up to the killing.
Police have yet to confirm this or why Cheng, a police accountant, was targeted.
Canberra is concerned about the prospect of lone-wolf attacks by individuals inspired by groups such as Islamic State and has cracked down on Australians attempting to travel to conflict zones, including Syria and Iraq.
The authorities lifted the terror threat alert to high a year ago, introduced new national security laws and have conducted several counterterrorism raids.
In September last year, Melbourne police shot dead a “known terror suspect” who stabbed two officers and in December, Iranian-born self-styled cleric Man Haron Monis and two hostages were killed following a 17-hour siege at a Sydney cafe.
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