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'Time to put radical group on outlaw list'

October 7, 2024

Monday 07 October 2024
Noah Yim, Ellie Dudley and Alexi Demetriadi
The Australian


 The Albanese government should "urgently" consider  proscribing Islamic fundamentalist organisation Hizb ut-Tahrir as a terrorist  group given its involvement in promoting "extremely provocative and  grossly insensitive protests" on the anniversary of the October 7  terrorist attacks, the Coalition says.
 
 The renewed call to proscribe the group as a terrorist organisation has been  backed by the Zionist Federation of Australia and Strategic Analysis  Australia director Peter Jennings, who said there had been sufficient  international evidence that overseas versions of the organisation had  "terrorist connections".
 
 Mr Jennings said "given our current domestic situation, what the  government should be doing is being seen to crack down hard on any groups  with those sorts of sympathies".
 
 Hizb ut-Tahrir was proscribed as a terrorist organisation in the UK this  year, but the Albanese government has resisted calls to do so here.
 
 A spokesman for AttorneyGeneral Mark Dreyfus told The Australian: "We  take advice from our security and intelligence agencies about whether to list  organisations, and we don't speculate publicly about that process."
 
 "The government condemns the hateful comments by members of Hizb  ut-Tahrir. There is no place in Australia for such disgraceful statements or  the glorification of terrorism," the spokesman said.
 
 Deakin University Global Islamic Politics chair Greg Barton and Lowy  Institute non-resident fellow Rodger Shanahan cautioned that a terrorist  listing may boost the organisation's profile.
 
 A Hizb ut-Tahrir front, Stand for Palestine, is scheduled to hold a rally for  Palestine and Lebanon at Lakemba Mosque in Sydney's southwest on Monday, the  oneyear anniversary of the October 7 Hamas terrorist attacks.
 
 The group has also been linked to the University of Sydney's Muslim students'  association, which extracted concessions from the university in exchange for  ending the near two-month-long encampment protest earlier in the year.
 
 The organisation has previously been heavily criticised for promoting  extremism and celebrating Hamas's October 7 attacks.
 
 Anthony Albanese and NSW Premier Chris Minns have spoken out against the  planned rally.
 
 "I have no time (for) and condemn that organisation ... (the rally)  won't be sanctioned," Mr Albanese said on Friday. "I believe very  strongly that those planning any events on October 7 should recognise that  that is not the time to engage in that activity."
 
 On Sunday, Mr Minns told Sky News he was "concerned" about the  planned rally and warned that the "restrictive laws" of the state  would be enforced. "I think that there's a prevalence or a sense amongst  some in the community that racism directed towards members of the Jewish  community is acceptable it's not, it's covered by the law, and you'll be  prosecuted and arrested as a result," he said.
 
 On Saturday, Stand for Palestine said it was "laughable" that it  was a front for Hizb ut-Tahrir, which also denied the claims on X.
 
 But this is despite Hizb ut-Tahrir announcing on Facebook in October 2023  that it was establishing Stand for Palestine, inviting its about 10,000  followers to the new front's "launch", as well as the extremist  group's own events.
 
 Mr Jennings said organisations such as Hizb ut-Tahrir "seek to function  in diaspora communities and they look for sort of places where they can  operate in the margins of legal frameworks".
 
 "The business that we should be in, Australia, is just to cut those  loopholes away and take a notolerance policy," he said.
 
 Opposition home affairs spokesman James Paterson urged the government to  consider proscribing Hizb ut-Tahrir as a terrorist organisation.
 
 "Hizb ut-Tahrir is an extremist organisation and is proscribed by some  of our closest allies and likeminded partners including the United  Kingdom," he said. "Given their involvement in promoting extremely  provocative and grossly insensitive protests on 7 October the Minister for  Home Affairs, Tony Burke, should seek urgent advice from his department about  whether they can be listed in Australia."
 
 More than 15,000 protesters hit the streets of Sydney and Melbourne on  Sunday. More protests are expected on Monday.
 
 'The business that we should be in, Australia, is just to cut those loopholes  away and take a no-tolerance policy' PETER JENNINGS STRATEGIC ANALYSIS  AUSTRALIA

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