Isis claims responsibility for Melbourne siege that left two people dead

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The Guardian Reports

Islamic State has claimed responsibility for the shooting and hostage situation that left two men dead in Melbourne overnight.

The gunman, named by police on Tuesday as Yacqub Khayre, took a woman hostage in an apartment building in Brighton, 11km south-east of Melbourne’s central business district, on Monday night.

Police shot him dead after he emerged from the complex with a sawn-off shotgun, shooting at officers. They then discovered the body of another man in the foyer of the apartment block.

Three police officers were shot during the siege, although their injuries were not life-threatening. Two police suffered hand injuries and a third was injured in the face and neck area.

The hostage had been called to the apartment through an escort service on Monday, police said. On Tuesday police said the woman was traumatised but not hurt. The dead man had been working at the serviced apartments.

Yacqub Khayre
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Yacqub Khayre pictured leaving court in Melbourne in 2010. Police said Khayre was the gunman at the centre of Monday night’s Melbourne hostage attack. Photograph: Julian Smith/AAP

Isis published a statement via a news agency linked to the group, saying the attack had been carried out by one of its soldiers.

“The attack in Melbourne, Australia, was carried out by a soldier of the Islamic State in response to the call for targeting the subjects of the coalition states,” said a statement published on the group’s Amaq news agency and translated by Reuters.

The Seven Network reported the gunman called the organisation saying “This is for IS [Islamic State]. This is for al-Qaida.”

That appeared to conflict with Isis’s claim of direct responsibility.

Victoria police confirmed on Tuesday morning they were treating the siege as an act of terrorism. The state’s chief police commissioner, Graham Ashton, said it was still unclear whether it was a planned or spontaneous attack.

Ashton said police had not yet established whether Isis was directly involved. He cautioned against placing too much faith in Isis’s claim of responsibility.

“We know that Islamic State have jumped in and claimed responsibility, but we also know they do that at the drop of a hat,” Ashton said.

The New York Times reporter Rukmini Callimachi, who has written extensively on Isis claims, said on Twitter the Melbourne sequence of events appeared to fit a pattern where supporters of the terrorist movement took matters into their own hands without necessarily having direct instructions from Isis.

Ashton confirmed the identity of the attacker as Khayre, who was previously charged over an alleged terrorism plot targeting the Holsworthy army barracks in Sydney.

He was acquitted. But Khayre, whom Ashton described as having an extensive criminal history, had been behind bars for other offences. He was released in November and was on parole at the time of Monday’s attack.

Ashton said Khayre had a “counter-terrorism background” going back to 2009, but said law enforcement had not currently considered him a heightened risk.

“We have hundreds of people that we need to try and keep an eye on and we do that in conjunction with the commonwealth intelligence agencies and the Australian federal police,” Ashton told the ABC. “He wasn’t someone who we had heightened concerns about at the moment.”

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