Australian police foil anti-Semitic attack involving explosives
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SYDNEY - Australian police said on Jan 29 they had foiled a planned anti-Semitic attack after discovering a caravan containing explosives, in an escalation of threats against the Jewish community that the authorities called terrorism.
The caravan was discovered on Jan 19 in Dural, a suburb some 36km north-west of the centre of Sydney, Deputy Police Commissioner David Hudson told a news conference.
“That caravan contained an amount of explosives and some indication that those explosives might be used in some form of anti-Semitic attack,” he told a news conference.
The threat had been fully contained and there is no further threat to the Jewish community, he added.
Commissioner Hudson said arrests had been made but did not disclose how many or what the charges were.
New South Wales Premier Chris Minns said over 100 officers were investigating the incident, under a joint counter-terrorism operation involving state and federal police.
“This is the discovery of a potential mass casualty event. There is only one way of calling it out, and that is terrorism,” he said.
Australia has suffered a spate of anti-Semitic incidents
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, whose centre-left Labor Party faces re-election in polls that must be held by May, has been criticised by the opposition over the rise in anti-Semitic incidents in the country.
The government says it has taken extra steps to protect the Jewish community, including more funding and a federal taskforce to investigate anti-Semitic incidents. REUTERS

