Australia disrupts terror plot to bring down airplane 
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Australian authorities said Sunday they had stopped an allegedly Islamist-inspired "terrorist plot" to bring down an airplane with an improvised explosive, after four people were arrested in raids in Sydney.
"I can report last night that there has been a major joint counter-terrorism operation to disrupt a terrorist plot to bring down an airplane," Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull told reporters.
Malcolm also said that additional security has been put in place at all major domestic and international airports, with travelers told to arrive two hours early for screenings.
Police man a check point in the Sydney inner suburb of Surry Hills after four people were arrested on July 29, 2017.‍/ AFP Photo

Police man a check point in the Sydney inner suburb of Surry Hills after four people were arrested on July 29, 2017.‍/ AFP Photo

Officials did not specify if the alleged plot targeted a domestic or international flight, but Sydney's Daily Telegraph reported that a local route had been the objective.
The four men, arrested in a series of raids across Sydney on Saturday, were allegedly linked to an "Islamic-inspired" plot, Australian Federal Police Commissioner Andrew Colvin said.
"In recent days, law enforcement has been become aware of information that suggested some people in Sydney were planning to commit a terrorist attack using an IED (improvised explosive device)," Colvin told reporters. 
But he added that police did not yet have "a great deal of information on the specific attack, the location, date or time," with the investigation expected to be "very long and protracted."
Police speak to passersby as they man a check point in the inner Sydney suburb of Surry Hills after four people were arrested on July 29, 2017. /AFP Photo

Police speak to passersby as they man a check point in the inner Sydney suburb of Surry Hills after four people were arrested on July 29, 2017. /AFP Photo

Turnbull said the alleged plan appeared to be "more in that category of an elaborate plot" rather than designed by a lone wolf, but added that the national terror alert level would remain at probable.
Canberra lifted the alert level in September 2014 and introduced new national security laws amid rising concerns over attacks by individuals inspired by organizations such as ISIL.
Counter-terrorism police have also made a string of arrests since late 2014 across the nation and say they have prevented 12 terror attacks on home soil, before the latest announcement, in the past few years.
But several attacks have taken place, including a cafe siege in 2014 where two hostages were killed and the murder of a Sydney police employee in 2015 by a 15-year-old boy.
(Source: AFP)
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