Even in death, Australia's apologists are still making excuses for the
gunning down of Curtis Cheng at point blank range by 15-year-old Farhad Khalil
Mohammad Jabar less than two weeks ago.
Last Saturday, 1500 people packed St Mary's Cathedral in Sydney to
farewell the police accountant. Cheng is our country's latest innocent
victim.
Jabar put the nail in the literal coffin
that Australia has to grow up and stop being so naïve.
How many
more incidents do we need in this country after the thwarted ANZAC Day attack
this year to behead an officer during the parade and the stabbing of two
Australian police officers in Victoria by an 18-year-old who planned to behead
them and post the images online.
This
Parramatta killer was 15 years old. Fifteen years old.
The good old
"she'll be right mate" is sadly long gone in this country.
In attempts
to prevent another Parramatta the Federal Government has introduced changes,
including a plan to lower the age at which a control order can be applied to
terror suspects from 16 to 14.
Australia
has changed. The world has changed so much in recent times. And, it is indeed
time the law finally caught up.
The annoying
do-gooders in our community still wanting to give the benefit of the doubt with
some politically correct clap-trap to excuse this heinous crime are wrong.
Those who
remain defiant at not wanting to accept the new reality that 15-year-olds and
12-year-olds are not the same as they were 50 years ago need to wake up and
quickly.
In relation
to the Parramatta shooting of Mr Cheng, 18-year-old Raban Alou has been charged
with aiding and abetting the commission of a terrorist act and 22-year-old
Talal Alamaddine has been charged with supplying the gun.
True to
form, a very slick "carey sharey" lawyer has already begun the
spin for his client, Raban Alou, claiming he was charged after "being held
for more than 200 hours for the purpose of interrogation" after police
raided four homes.
Alou and
Alamaddine did not make applications for bail and both will front court again
in December to fight the charges. They have the right to the presumption of
innocence until their cases are determined.
How many
more chances and benefits of the doubt do we give to those who claim the
calls this week to extend control orders to children as young at 14 will
further alienate at-risk youth and do nothing to keep Australia safe?
What a load
of the proverbial.
It is simply
another tool in the kit to try and prevent another murderous spree in our
country.
NSW Premier
Mike Baird is also seeking to extend up to 28 days the time that terror
suspects can be held without charge.
Despite what
Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull said in Parliament, that Australians must not
let fanatics change "the way we live or the way we express
ourselves", sadly Australia has changed. We need to stop the softly-softly
approach and play hardball in the bid to thwart violent extremism from taking a
hold on our shores.
Australian
Federal Police have confirmed there is a 12-year-old boy amongst more than
a dozen people believed contained in a Federal Court order imposed on a Sydney
terrorism suspect this year.
For goodness
sake, no one is going to be carted off in Australia at midnight from their
homes and never heard of again. That simply does not happen in our democratic
country and it will not happen in this country with the proposed changes to the
law.
But a
fortnight ago we never thought a Curtis Cheng attack would happen either.
In recent
times, the world has seen another 15-year-old British boy (co-incidentally on
the day of the dreadful Parramatta attack) become that country's youngest
convicted terrorist sentenced to life behind bars in Britain with a minimum
term of five years. He pleaded guilty to inciting an alleged Melbourne
jihadist, plotting a knife attack on Australian police officers on ANZAC Day.
Even in the
past week, another 15-year-old high school student was arrested in France after
screaming "Allahu Akbar" and shooting his teacher with a BB gun. This
15-year-old later told investigators that he also had a knife and grenade and
planned to kill his teacher because he wanted to die a martyr.
Australian
Human Rights National Children's Commissioner Megan Mitchell claims the federal
government's new proposed laws to extend control orders to 14 and 15-year-olds
could lead young people to become even more angry and alienated.
Commissioner
Mitchell says she is "particularly concerned that using laws to
control the behaviour of a young person when they have committed no crime…could
drive them to take their activities further underground and lose confidence in
and respect for our justice system."
She is
"worried that they may be ordered to wear a tracking device, have a
curfew, be required not to associate or communicate with certain people. They
may be denied access to computers or phones, have to report at regular times
and places or be prevented from visiting certain places."
Diddums.
Dear oh dear, give me a break.
Wake up and
smell the coffee Commissioner Mitchell!
If you have
not worked out by now that those young people out there today already
committing these types of horrific crimes and already associating with bad eggs
do not have any confidence in, or respect for, our justice system in the first
place then you are indeed living in airy-fairy land.
Commissioner
Mitchell believes that adolescents take risks as they explore the world and
their identity. That they deserve the rights to liberty, freedom of expression,
dignity and respect. She concedes that at age 14 it is easy for kids to go off
the rails, disengage, make bad associations and get into trouble.
So, to
me, that is all the more reason for these new proposed changes to a control
order to come into force so our authorities have the power to stop things
in their tracks before they get out of control.
Sadly,
the teenagers who have committed these crimes do not deserve the right to
liberty, freedom of expression, dignity and respect. The very same rights that
they permanently deny to victims like Curtis Cheng.
They did not
respect these rights growing up in this country which allowed them these rights
and freedoms in the first place.
If they are
able to be detained under a control order, because it is thought that they are
already flirting with the path of radicalisation, perhaps it may make them
think twice. And as a bonus for all of us, the police will get more opportunity
to stop whatever crazy and dangerous scheme is being cooked up.
The whole idea
is to prevent another horrific incident from happening again. It is evident we
need to do more than we are currently doing as these incidents are no longer
'isolated' or 'lone wolf' as they occur with increasing regularity and appear
to have strong elements of co-ordination between a number of individuals.
Don't get me
wrong, the thought of a 12-year-old or any teenager becoming radicalised within
Australia saddens me beyond belief.
But until we
train ourselves to see those who have been radicalised NOT as children but as
individuals with potential for causing great harm to the rest of us, no headway
can be made.
Just as they
have embarked on changing their mindset to want to kill Australians in cold
blood, we must change our mindset because children should not embark on
murderous sprees against their innocent fellow Australians.
These
individuals flirting with radicalisation do not deserve the benefit of the
doubt anymore.
And if they
are detained longer under a control order, no matter whether they are 14 or 24,
so be it.
Show me the
respect shown to Curtis Cheng by Farhad Jabar.
There was
none, was there? Cheng's freedom was not valued and his human rights were
trampled by a radicalised teenager with a gun that he managed to get hold of
despite our much-vaunted gun control laws.
As ever, if
you are not doing anything wrong, you have nothing to fear. I don't think there
will be a tidal wave of 14-year-olds being issued with these types of orders.
But the anti-terrorism authorities will have one more weapon in their armoury
to protect us.
Even if just
one more Parramatta-style plot is thwarted, all Australians will be winners.
The proposed control orders are worth a try.
Karalee Katsambanis has had more than 20
years experience as an award winning news journalist on television, radio and
newspapers. She is a mother of three. Her husband is a Liberal MP in WA. Listen
to her on 6PR's PerthTonight with Chris Ilsley between 9-10pm on Mondays.
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