Austria set to ban political Islam after recent terrorist attack
 
 
The Austrian cabinet headed by Chancellor Sebastian
Kurz has agreed to begin a crackdown on extremism and implement a wide range of
anti-terrorism measures after a deadly terrorist attack by an Islamic extremist
took place in Vienna earlier this month.
The Austrian cabinet headed by Chancellor Sebastian
Kurz has agreed to begin crackdown on extremism and implement a wide range of
anti-terrorism measures after a deadly terrorist attack by an Islamic extremist
took place in Vienna earlier this month.
The cabinet proposals include life sentence for
individuals convicted of terrorism charges, criminalising political extremism
driven by religion, electronic surveillance of people convicted of terrorism
charges after release, and revoking Austrian citizenship of dual nationals found
guilty of terror charges.
Targeting the terror suspects and the ideology
driving them, Chancellor Kurz said the proposals will be brought before the
parliament next month for a vote.
This comes after four people were killed and 20
others were injured in a terrorist attack carried out by an ISIS sympathiser in
Vienna earlier this month.
Austrain authorities identified the attacker as
20-year-old Kujtim Fejzulai, a dual national of Austria and North Macedonia who
was previously convicted for trying to join ISIS in Syria and had been given
early release in December last year.
"We will create a criminal offence called
'political Islam' in order to be able to take action against those who are not
terrorists themselves, but who create the breeding ground for them," Kurz
tweeted after the Cabinet meeting.
"Especially those who have already served a
prison sentence can pose a massive threat to our security. This is a major
intervention, but in my view a necessary step to minimize the threat
risk," Kurz added.
An investigation has been launched into why the
Austrian authorities did not have Fejzulai under observation, despite being
tipped off by Slovakian intelligence that he had tried to purchase arms and
ammunition at a shop in Bratislava in July.
Austria's minister for culture, Susanne Raab, said
the new measures were aimed at those who are opposed to "our values"
and want "to divide our society," not at Islam as a religion or the
many Muslims who practice it peacefully.
"This clear separation between extremist
Islamism and the religion is very important," Raab said.
The attack in Vienna came after a Tunisian man
fatally stabbed three people in Nice, France, and an 18-year-old Chechen
refugee beheaded a teacher in Paris after the teacher showed drawings of
Prophet Mohammed to his students in a freedom of speech class.
 
          
     
                                
 
 


