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Australia outlaws travel to hot spots

By Agencies in Sydney | China Daily | Updated: 2014-10-31 07:55

Australia on Thursday passed a law criminalizing travel to terror hot spots, a tough counter-terrorism measure aimed at stopping jihadists from going to Iraq and Syria to fight.

The Australian government has been increasingly concerned about the flow of foreign fighters to the Middle East to join militant groups such as Islamic State, with 70 Australians believed to have already made the journey.

The Counter-Terrorism Legislation Amendment (Foreign Fighters) includes measures that make it an offense to enter a "declared area", where a terrorist organization is engaging in hostile activity, without a valid reason.

The offense carries a maximum penalty of 10 years in prison.

"The foreign fighters bill that has passed the Parliament today will mean, first of all, that it is easier to secure convictions against Australians who have been fighting with terrorist groups overseas," Prime Minister Tony Abbott said.

"It will mean that it is easier to monitor potential terrorists here, and it will also mean ... that it is easier to prosecute the preachers of hate who create the potential terrorists."

Abbott said about 100 Australians were supporting jihadists who had traveled to the Middle East to fight, with recruitment and funding from home.

Some 20 jihadists who fought with terrorist groups in the region had also returned to Australia, Abbott added.

"The best way to deal with returning foreign fighters is to stop them leaving in the first place. ... I'm able to inform the House that some 70 Australian passports have been canceled to stop terrorists or potential terrorists from traveling."

Data retention bill

The new law came into force as the government introduced a bill on Thursday that requires Australian telecommunication firms to retain customers' digital data for two years.

Communications Minister Malcolm Turnbull said the laws were "absolutely critical" for law enforcement and intelligence agencies, while stressing that the metadata collected "does not include the content of communications".

But the Australian Lawyers Alliance said the data retention bill was a "recipe for privacy abuse" and would leave Australians with "no protection against security agencies misusing their personal or private information".

AFP - AP

(China Daily 10/31/2014 page11)

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