MELBOURNE,
Australia, October 17 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) – Arsonists
who firebombed a Melbourne mosque Thursday, October 17, have threatened
further attacks against Muslims, an Islamic community leader said.
Arsonists
threw a firebomb into a Melbourne mosque early Thursday, the third
attack on a Muslim religious site since a weekend bombing in Bali.
No
one was injured but windows were smashed and carpets burned when the
firebomb was thrown through the mosque window in East Doncaster before
dawn, they said. The fire was put out by people who were in the
building, Agence France-Presse (AFP) reported.
Mosque
spokesman Noor Dean said the attackers also daubed anti-Islamic graffiti
on the building.
“There
were threats like 'you get out or we’ll be back again’,” he said.
“This
is a backlash from (Bali). The community is aware of that.”
“It
seems we are becoming the people who have to answer for the bad deeds of
others,” Dean said.
He
said the mosque would now employ security guards and ask police to step
up patrols.
Police
said they were investigating whether the firebombing in retaliation for
the Bali bombings, which authorities have blamed on "Islamic
radicals" although no one has claimed responsibility.
“It’s
not being looked at as a retaliation attack, it’s just being looked at
as an arson attack on a building,” said Deputy Police Commissioner
Bill Kelly.
“But
obviously given what has happened last Saturday that puts another
dimension into the investigation to follow-up on, to make sure it either
is or isn’t politically or religiously motivated,” he said.
On
Tuesday, October 15, a school and the home of a Muslim cleric in Sydney
were attacked by stone-throwing vandals.
The
Australian Federation of Islamic Council described the incident as
retribution for the deaths of Australians in Bali, although police
refused to immediately label the attack a hate crime without further
investigation.
Australian
authorities have urged the public not to hold Muslims responsible for
the bombing.
Police
patrols have been stepped up around Muslim sites across the country.
Police
said at least two men entered the grounds of an Islamic school in
Sydney’s western suburbs early Tuesday, smashing windows and damaging
the residence of Imam Ahmed Shabbir, which is on the premises.
Appearing
shaken but unhurt, Shabbir told ABC television he called police as the
intruders battered his home.
“I
told them that we are in a dangerous position, that people are attacking
us so please come and help us,” he said.
While
police said they were not treating the attack as a hate crime, Shabbir
said Australian Muslims were fearful in the wake of the Bali bombing.
Leaders
of the country’s 500,000-strong Islamic community said they were
worried Australians angry over the attacks would indiscriminately target
Muslims.
Imam
Uzair Akbar, whose Holland Park Mosque in suburban Brisbane was badly
damaged in an arson attack following last year’s September 11 attacks,
has hired extra security guards.
“Emotions
are running high and there’s a lot of anger,” he told AFP.
“It’s
there in the back of my mind that it might happen again, I’d like to
think it won't but I thought that last year and my mosque was burned
down.”
“The
message to our Australian brothers and sisters is that we too condemn
this terrible attack, our religion does not respect the taking of
innocent blood.”
A
24-year-old man was convicted last week over the Brisbane arson attack,
which the trial judge described as racially motivated.
Prime
Minister John Howard has described Islam as a religion of peace and
rejected the notion of the attackers acting for a religious cause.
Muslim
leaders said they will condemn the Bali bombing at noon prayers on
Friday, October 18.
Australian
Muslims will condemn the Bali bombing at noon prayers on Friday and be
encouraged to donate blood for those injured in the blast, a state
Islamic council said.
New
South Wales Islamic Council chairman Ali Roude said Australia's 500,000
Muslims had felt under seige since the weekend bombing and wanted to
demonstrate that they shared the wider community’s revulsion at the
atrocity.
“The
mosques will be full across Australia and the imams will make an
expression of sorrow for those who were killed and severely injured,”
he said.
“Muslims
will encouraged to do everything they can to condemn this barbaric act
-- donating blood, giving money, offering voluntary assistance.”
“Every
now and then, when something happens overseas, the (Muslim) community
comes under siege,” he said.
|
|
Palestine:
Sharon To Meet Bush To Discuss
U.S. Attack on Iraq
Peres Defends Oslo, Says
Far-Right's Blindness to Bring Catastrophe
Hezbollah to Retaliate
"Within Minutes" If Israel Hits Water Project
Five Israelis Injured In A Bus Shooting
Israel Abducts, Then Releases, Top Palestinian Muslim Official, Ekrima Sabri
Iraq:
Chirac Against One U.N.
Resolution, Denies Iraq’s Link to Al-Qaeda
All Iraqis Vote For Saddam,
Opposition Cries Foul Play
Bush’s Campaign Against Iraq
May Lead to His Impeachment
On Wheelchairs, Iraqi Handicaps
Vote for Saddam
Kuwaiti Teen With 10 Molotov Cocktails Arrested Near U.S. Military Complex
Turkey’s Erdogan Resigns Top Party Post
Saddam Did Not Threaten to Attack Qatar, Says FM
Lynching 5 Dalits in Police Presence Exposes India’s Inhuman Caste System
Churchmen Urge Arabs to Defend Iraq Against New War
Bali C4 Standard Military Explosive Manufactured in U.S.
Israeli Tanks Kill 8 Palestinians, Including 2 Children
“Temple of Solomon” Calendar Causes Uproar in South Africa
Bangladesh Blasts Time Magazine
Story
Yemen Admits “Terrorist Act” Behind Tanker Blast
Second Australian Mosque Bombed, Threats of More Attacks
Indonesian Police to Name Two Suspects in Bali Blast
At Least 5 Killed, 144 Wounded in Philippine Blasts
Hindu Extremist Calls For Suicide Squads to Fight “Islamic Terrorism”
Egypt Celebrates Rebirth of
Ancient Alexandria Library
Bali Blast Heinous, Terrorist
Crime, Say Al-Azhar Grand Imam, IWL
Lebanon Inaugurates Wazzani
Project Despite Israeli Threats
India To Cut Troops From
Pakistan Borders
U.S. Army Set To Join
Washington Sniper Hunt
U.S. Boycotts Lebanon’s Water
Project Opposed By Israel
CIA Trapped in Its Own Game in
Indonesia: Analysts
Jordanian Officials: Committees Against Normalizing With Israel “Illegal”
Pakistani Islamic Alliance To
Nominate Scholar For PM Post
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|