AussieNick
Forum Digger
I figure this should go in the military news section, because it's all part of the war on terror.
From the ABC website
Read more here.
http://www.abc.net.au/news/newsitems/200511/s1500718.htm
More on the shooting.
http://www.theadvertiser.news.com.au/common/story_page/0,5936,17181575%5E1702,00.html
Sixteen men arrested in Melbourne and Sydney during overnight counter-terrorism raids remain in custody.
Another Sydney man remains under police guard in hospital after he was shot in the neck by police when he allegedly opened fire at officers as they were trying to arrest him.
In Melbourne, two of the nine men who have been charged with being a member of a terrorist organisation have applied for bail in the Magistrates Court.
From the ABC website
Read more here.
http://www.abc.net.au/news/newsitems/200511/s1500718.htm
More on the shooting.
The dramatic clash in a suburban street followed a series of raids in Sydney and Melbourne in which 16 other suspects were charged, and which police say foiled a major terrorist attack.
Witnesses said they saw the man, carrying a backpack, draw a handgun and fire at least two shots at uniformed police officers who had confronted him in Wilson Rd, Green Valley, about 9am (AEDT).
Officers had been tracking the man near a mosque in Wilson Rd, where he was spotted leaving a vehicle, police said.
"Four officers from Green Valley police station attended Wilson Road, saw the man that was of interest and as they did, he saw them," New South Wales Assistant Police Commissioner Graeme Morgan said.
"Witnesses have told police that he produced a firearm and fired at the police."
The man fired twice, with one bullet grazing an officer's hand before a colleague fired back, it was alleged.
"One of the police officers returned fire and the person of interest to police was wounded in the neck," Mr Morgan said.
Of the injured police officer, Mr Morgan said later, "He's fine."
Authorities feared the backpack might have contained explosives, prompting them to cordon off the street and evacuate about 30 residents.
As curious bystanders gathered, a bomb-disposal robot manoeuvred painstakingly towards the place where the man was shot to determine the contents of the backpack.
After a delicate operation, police revealed the bag contained some papers and a handgun - in addition to the one used to fire at police - but no explosives.
An investigation team from the State Crime Command has been established to determine the circumstances of the shooting.
Mr Morgan defended the officers' decision to shoot "in the urgency of the moment".
"There isn't time for niceties," Mr Morgan told ABC radio.
http://www.theadvertiser.news.com.au/common/story_page/0,5936,17181575%5E1702,00.html