Australia
Sunday said it stopped two teenage brothers at Sydney Airport believed to be
heading to the Middle East to fight, amid growing concern in Western countries
over young people joining jihadist groups.
Immigration Minister Peter Dutton said the two boys, aged 16 and 17 and from Sydney, had tickets to an undisclosed Middle Eastern country and raised the suspicions of customs officers on Friday night. “These two young men... are kids, not killers, and they shouldn’t be allowed to go to a foreign land to fight and to come back to our shores eventually more radicalised,” Dutton told reporters.
“In some cases, these young people who are going off to fight in areas like Syria will be killed themselves and that’s a tragedy for their families, for their communities, and for our country.”
The minister said a search of the boys’ luggage raised more questions about their trip and they were referred to the federal police’s counter-terrorism unit.
He said the two youths “had taken a very radical decision ultimately without the knowledge of their parents”.
“Their parents, as I understand it, were as shocked as any of us would be.”
An Australian Federal Police spokeswoman said in a statement that the boys, whose identities were not released, were “arrested under suspicion of attempting to prepare for incursions into foreign countries for the purpose of engaging in hostile activities”.
They were later handed back to their parents and an investigation is ongoing, she said.
Immigration Minister Peter Dutton said the two boys, aged 16 and 17 and from Sydney, had tickets to an undisclosed Middle Eastern country and raised the suspicions of customs officers on Friday night. “These two young men... are kids, not killers, and they shouldn’t be allowed to go to a foreign land to fight and to come back to our shores eventually more radicalised,” Dutton told reporters.
“In some cases, these young people who are going off to fight in areas like Syria will be killed themselves and that’s a tragedy for their families, for their communities, and for our country.”
The minister said a search of the boys’ luggage raised more questions about their trip and they were referred to the federal police’s counter-terrorism unit.
He said the two youths “had taken a very radical decision ultimately without the knowledge of their parents”.
“Their parents, as I understand it, were as shocked as any of us would be.”
An Australian Federal Police spokeswoman said in a statement that the boys, whose identities were not released, were “arrested under suspicion of attempting to prepare for incursions into foreign countries for the purpose of engaging in hostile activities”.
They were later handed back to their parents and an investigation is ongoing, she said.
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