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Australia's Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has agreed with police assertion that a caravan full of explosives in Sydney was an act of terrorism.
NSW Premier Chris Minns is speaking on an ongoing investigation, after police uncovered a caravan carrying items purportedly illustrating a terror plot.
NSW Police are investigating a caravan, which was laden with power gel explosives and had the potential to a cause a "mass casualty event", alongside a document with both antisemitic sentiments and a list of targets.
Australian city's Jewish community on edge after police — who kept the incident secret until it was leaked — say they're probing possible connections to recent antisemitic attacks
A disturbing note and powerful explosives strong enough to create a 40-metre blast radius were found inside a Sydney caravan police say was intended for a “mass casualty” anti-Semitic attack.
Police are “not happy” details relating to caravan packed with explosives strong enough to create a 40-metre blast radius in Sydney were leaked to media and made public.
Three more incidents of anti-Semitic graffiti were found across Sydney yesterday morning, leading Australian political leaders to warn of an escalation in hatred and decry as terrorism explosives found earlier in a trailer on the city’s outskirts.
The Australian Security Intelligence Organisation says it anticipated spikes in politically motivated violence months before a caravan laced with explosives, intended for Jewish targets in Sydney, was discovered by the side of the road 10 days ago.
Explosives and a note of Jewish targets have been found in a caravan in Sydney’s northwest. A resident in Dural reportedly made the chilling find in an abandoned caravan on Derriwong Rd in Dural, according to The Daily Telegraph, with the masthead reporting the incident was being treated as a credible terror threat.
Police found “an amount” of powergel explosives in the caravan, enough to create a 40-metre blast radius, along with notes and the address of a Sydney synagogue inside. Powergel is the brand name for a range of “high-strength” explosives used in the mining industry.
A prominent Jewish leader has pointed to the two important alarming lessons police and his community have learnt following the discovery of a caravan in Sydney's north-west packed with explosives and a note inside scribbled with Jewish targets.