jackmountain
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Let’s be honest: Man Haron Monis was an IS terrorist
http://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/news/opinion/lets-be-honest-man-haron-monis-was-an-is-terrorist/story-fni0cwl5-1227158489614
AUSTRALIA has watched anxiously as its citizens travelled to Syria and Iraq to take up arms for IS but Man Haron Monis did the opposite — he brought IS to Australia.
As much as some commentators may not want to admit it, Monis followed the IS playbook to the letter.
Capture worldwide media attention by taking “disbelievers” hostage. Tick.
Raise a jihadist flag. Tick.
Film the terrorised hostages in front of said flag. Tick.
Kill an American, European, Australian or Canadian. Sadly, tick.
But as the first Islamic terror attack against Australian civilians on home soil reached a bloody end, many observers have been at pains to distance Monis from terrorism.
Seven’s Sunrise host David Koch assured viewers over and over that there was no link between Monis and IS.
Monis’ former lawyer Manny Conditsis claimed the Lindt cafe attack was “not a concerted terrorism event or act”. “This was a one-off random individual,” he told the ABC.
Sydney barrister Larissa Andelman tweeted that the notion of “Islamic terror” was “not supported by the facts”. “More like Martin Byrant in Tasmania. Lone crazy guy,” she wrote.
Monis was certainly crazy — but show me a terrorist that isn’t.
That Monis — a long-time purveyor of hate who boasted almost 15,000 Facebook followers — acted as a “lone wolf” is hardly relevant when assessing whether he saw himself acting on behalf of IS.
It is IS’ ability to attract disenfranchised individuals through its horrific social media campaigns that makes it a global menace. If Osama bin Laden ran al-Qaeda for company men, IS is open to freelancers.
There is no need to fill in a membership form to join IS’ bloodthirsty quest; no need to declare if you are single or part of a group; no need to wait for an instruction to attack.
“If you can kill a disbelieving American or European ... or an Australian or a Canadian, or any other disbeliever from the disbelievers waging war, including the citizens of the countries that entered into a coalition against the Islamic State, then rely on Allah, and kill him in any manner or way, however it may be,’’ IS spokesman Abu Muhammad al-Adnani declared in September.
Monis’ attack came after other so-called “lone wolves” acted in Ottawa, Jerusalem and New York in the wake of IS’ September edict.
While veteran Australian security expert Neil Fergus said IS would “try to claim” the cafe attack as one of its own, Monis himself was desperate to declare it so.
The three videos uploaded to YouTube showed three of Monis’ poor hostage victims calling on the media to report that “this is an attack on Australia by IS”.
Monis also promised, through the hostages’ videos, to release one of his victims if an IS flag was delivered to the cafe.
Attempts to write off Monis as a self-styled cleric are also wide of the mark. Conditsis pointed out his former client was a Muslim cleric in Iran before he received political asylum in Australia in about 2001.
There can be also no doubt that his attack was a terrorist act, as defined under Australia’s Criminal Code Act 1995.
The code says: “A ‘terrorist act’ is an act, or a threat to commit an act, that is done with the intention to coerce or influence the public or any government by intimidation to advance a political, religious or ideological cause, and the act causes: death, serious harm or endangers a person.”
Put simply, Monis acted to advance a political, religious or ideological cause and endangered people.
He was a terrorist, clearly influenced by IS. Let’s be honest. His victims deserve at least that.
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