Australian jihadists fighting overseas who are “trained killers” and “hate our way of life” should be stopped from returning home and detained if they do, Prime Minister Tony Abbott said on Friday.
Australia has concerns that its citizens are fighting alongside Sunni militants in Iraq and Syria, including with the radical Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) group.
Abbott said more than 100 Australians had travelled to Syria and Iraq, and some had been involved with “this murderous, murderous Al-Qaeda splinter group,” a reference to ISIL.
The European Union warned earlier this year that the number of young European Muslims going to fight alongside extremist groups in Syria and elsewhere is fast growing, and governments fear they will pose a security risk if they return home.
Abbott said authorities were keeping a careful watch on as many of the Australians who had travelled to conflict zones as possible.
Australian Foreign Minister Julie Bishop said Thursday she was “deeply concerned” about the threat Australian fighters could pose when they returned home, adding she had cancelled a number of passports on the advice of intelligence agencies.