Australian police have charged five men suspected of planning to travel to Syria to join the Islamic State (IS) group via a journey that would start in a small motor boat taking them to Indonesia and the Philippines.
The men, aged between 21 and 31, were charged on Saturday with preparing to enter a foreign country “for the purpose of engaging in hostile activities,” an offense that carries a maximum penalty of life imprisonment.
Australian Attorney-General George Brandis yesterday told reporters that “their intentions to travel to the Middle East to engage in terrorist war fighting were known to the authorities,” and that their passports had earlier been canceled.
The five, who were not named, were arrested on Tuesday after towing the 7m motor boat almost 3,000km from Melbourne to Cairns in northern Queensland state, police said.
The men, who have been in custody since Tuesday, are scheduled to appear in court today.
Brandis said that when it became clear to the men they could not leave “in an orthodox way, they remained under surveillance so that if they attempted to leave the country in this very unusual way they would be able to be stopped and they were.”
There is “an unusual character to the plot, I know it has been ridiculed, but these are serious crimes,” he said.
A separate police statement said there is no current threat of a terrorist act to the Australian community arising from this investigation.
Australia has been on heightened alert for attacks by home-grown radicals since 2014 and authorities say they have thwarted a number of potential ones.
There have been several “lone wolf” assaults, including a siege of a Sydney cafe that left two hostages and the gunman dead.
About 100 people have left Australia for Syria to fight alongside organizations such as Islamic State, Australia’s immigration minister said last month.
Police last week said that it was unclear where the men had planned to put the boat in the water. Indonesia and Australia share a maritime border, but it spans several hundred kilometers of open sea at its narrowest point.
The Australian Broadcasting Corp said Melbourne-born radical preacher Musa Cerantonio, a vocal supporter of the Islamic State group who was deported from the Philippines to Australia in 2014, was among those charged.
It said two of the other men were Shayden Thorne and Kadir Kaya.
Police declined to comment on the report.
Australian Foreign Minister Julie Bishop yesterday said she that she would attend Syria peace talks in Vienna tomorrow that will be co-chaired by US Secretary of State John Kerry and Russian Minister of Foreign Affairs Sergey Lavrov.
Additional reporting by AFP
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