No Script

Please Wait...

Al-Ahed Telegram

Australia to Jail Citizens Joining Syria Rebels: More than Hundred Fight in Syria,3 Dead

Australia to Jail Citizens Joining Syria Rebels: More than Hundred Fight in Syria,3 Dead
folder_openToday's News access_time11 years ago
starAdd to favorites

Local Editor

Rebels from all nationalities fight in Syria. A truth that can't be hidden after the details unveiled by media reports. However, this time an official confession came from beyond the seas: Australia warned its citizens of joining the fight in Syria.


Australia to Jail Citizens Joining Syria Rebels: More than Hundred Fight in Syria,3 Dead
A spokesman for Australian Foreign Minister Bob Carr warned Friday all citizens who take part in the fighting in Syria face up to 20 years in jail.
This comes as spokesman Melbourne man, who joined the rebels, was killed in the conflict.
The spokesman said the government was aware of reports that more than 100 Australians had engaged in the conflict since 2011 but he had "no evidence" of any citizens currently involved.

Under the Crimes Foreign Incursions and Recruitment Act 1978: "A person shall not enter a foreign state with intent to engage in a hostile activity... or engage in a hostile activity in a foreign state."
"Penalty is imprisonment for 20 years," the spokesman said.
He further stated that "anyone in Australia who recruits someone to fight overseas faces seven years."

At least three Australians are reported to have died in Syria, including a Melbourne bricklayer reportedly traveling under the name Abu al-Walid al-Australi and killed last weekend fighting alongside rebels.
Australian Arabic Council founder Joseph Wakim said many people traveling to Syria claimed they were providing humanitarian support to the war-torn nation but were instead involved in the fighting.

"I do believe that for most of these people it is far more a decision of personal conviction than it is of some sort of financial gain," he told the Australian Broadcasting Corporation.
He has called for greater vigilance over people traveling to the country.
But Carr said it was very difficult to keep track of people's movements in Syria.
"It's a country on the verge of collapse and internal communications are extremely poor," Carr told the ABC.

In parallel, he mentioned: "It is a matter of militia against militia; that local militia control parts of the country and our capacity to know what individual Australians might be doing inside Syria is, of course, extremely limited."


Source: News Agencies, Edited by moqawama.org

Comments