Iran link to Australian synagogue attack uncovered via funding trail, spy agency says
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A 20-year-old local man, Younes Ali Younes, was charged with the Dec 6, 2024 arson attack on the Adass Israel Synagogue and theft of a car.
PHOTO: REUTERS
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SYDNEY – Australia’s intelligence agency traced the funding of hooded criminals who allegedly set fire to a Melbourne synagogue, linking the anti-Semitic attack to Iran, officials said, even as those charged with the crime were likely unaware Tehran was their puppet master.
A 20-year-old local man, Younes Ali Younes, appeared in the Magistrates Court in Melbourne on Aug 27, charged with the Dec 6, 2024 arson attack on the Adass Israel Synagogue
He did not enter a plea and also did not seek bail.
His lawyer declined to give any comments.
A day earlier, Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said Australia’s intelligence agencies had shown that the attack and another in Sydney in 2024 were directed by the Iranian government, and expelled Tehran’s ambassador.
Security services in Britain and Sweden warned in 2024 that Tehran was using criminal proxies to carry out its violent attacks in those countries, with London saying it had disrupted 20 Iran-linked plots since 2022.
A dozen other countries have condemned what they called a surge in assassination, kidnapping and harassment plots by Iranian intelligence services.
Australia’s spy chief Mike Burgess said a series of “cut-outs”, an intelligence term for intermediaries, were used to conceal Iran’s involvement in the attacks, and warned that it may have orchestrated others.
Security forces “have done rather extraordinary work to trace the source of the funding of these criminal elements who have been used as tools of the Iranian regime”, Mr Albanese told the Australian Broadcasting Corporation on Aug 26.
The investigation worked backwards through payments made onshore and offshore to “petty and sometimes not so petty criminals”, he said in Parliament on Aug 27.
Mr Albanese was briefed by the Australian Security Intelligence Organisation on Aug 25 on evidence of a “supply chain” that he said linked the attacks to offshore individuals and Tehran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps.
Australia's diplomats in Iran were discreetly told to leave, making it out of Iranian airspace just after midnight, he said.
A public announcement, with Mr Albanese flanked by his spy chief and foreign and home affairs ministers, came on Aug 26, prompting accolades from Israel.
Iran’s Foreign Ministry said it “absolutely rejected” Australia’s accusation.
The turning point in the investigation came weeks earlier, as Australian Federal Police and the Australian Security Intelligence Organisation seized mobile phones and digital devices from suspects arrested in Victoria state over the synagogue attack – and highlighted a stolen blue Volkswagen Golf sedan used in unrelated attacks.
CCTV footage of the night of Dec 6 released by police shows three hooded figures, one of whom was wielding an axe, unloading red jerry cans of fuel from the boot of the car at the entrance of the synagogue and setting it alight before speeding away.
Victoria’s Joint Counter Terrorism Team alleged that Younes stole the car to carry out the attack and recklessly endangered lives by setting fire to the A$20 million (S$16.7 million) synagogue when people were inside, a charge sheet shows.
No one was wounded in the attack.
A co-accused, Giovanni Laulu, 21, appeared in court in July on the same charges.
Police have referred to the sedan as a "communal crime car" linked to other attacks that were not politically motivated.
In a press conference on July 30 to announce that seven search warrants had been executed and a man arrested over the synagogue attack, the Australian Federal Police's then deputy commissioner Krissy Barrett said it was politically motivated and involved offshore criminals.
“We suspect these criminals worked with criminal associates in Victoria to carry out the arson attack,” she said, and confirmed that a major Australian crime figure deported to Iraq in 2023 was “one of our ongoing lines of inquiry”.
She said police were working with the Five Eyes intelligence network that includes Britain, the United States, Canada and New Zealand.
Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke told ABC Radio on Aug 27 that those involved locally would not have necessarily known “who had started it”.
“You have a series of intermediaries, so that people performing different actions don’t, in fact, know who is directing them or don’t necessarily know who is directing them,” he said. REUTERS