Australian-Lebanese man found guilty in Etihad Airways bomb plot

Australian court on Wednesday found a man guilty of
plotting to blow up a an Etihad Airways flight out of Sydney at the behest of
the Islamic State militant group, by hiding a bomb in his brother's luggage.
Police had accused the man, Khaled Khayat, and
another brother, Mahmoud Khayat, of planning two terrorist attacks that also
included a chemical gas attack on the flight to Abu Dhabi in July 2017, police
said.
The third brother was unaware that he was carrying a
bomb, disguised as a meat mincer, in his luggage, as he tried to check in at
the airport, police said.
But the device was taken out of his luggage when it
was deemed too heavy and the bomb never made it past airport security.
Khaled and Mahmoud Khayat were arrested weeks later
after a series of raids in Sydney.
"The jury this afternoon returned a guilty
verdict for Khaled and is still deliberating in respect of Mahmoud," a
spokeswoman for the New South Wales Supreme Court said.
Police had alleged that high-grade military
explosives used to make the bomb were sent by air cargo from Turkey as part of
a plot "inspired and directed" by Islamic state.
Khaled admitted to carrying the bomb into the
airport when questioned by police. He said, however, that when he saw children
in the airport, he removed the bomb from the bag, and thought: “Don’t do it,
don’t be stupid, don’t do it.”
Khaled's sentence hearing has been set for July 26.
The charges carry a maximum punishment of life in prison.
Scott Morrison, the prime minister, said in November
the likelihood of a terror attack in Australia remained at the
"probable" level, after a fatal stabbing in Melbourne that police
said was inspired by Islamic State.
Australia has a five-level terror threat ranking
system and "probable" is its midpoint.
The threat likelihood has been set at probable since
the system was introduced in 2015. In December 2014, two hostages were killed
during a 17-hour siege by a "lone wolf" gunman, inspired by Islamic
State militants, in a cafe in Sydney.