Canberra: Australia intends to add far-right extremist group The Base and the entirety of the Lebanese group Hezbollah to its list of outlawed terrorist organisations as national security services grapple with a surge in neo-Nazi cells and other ideologically motivated extremists.
The Base, a neo-Nazi white supremacist group formed in the United States in 2018, would become only the second far-right group to be designated a terrorist organisation in Australia after the British-based Sonnenkrieg Division was listed in August, Home Affairs Minister Karen Andrews said on Wednesday.
The remaining 25 terrorist organisations on Australia’s list are Muslim groups, including Hezbollah’s External Security Organisation, which was designated under Australia’s Criminal Code in 2003.
Including all Hezbollah entities as terrorist organisations would make being a member of or supporting those entities a criminal offense.
Andrews said terrorist organisations were watching as Australia lifted border and pandemic restrictions while allowing its vaccinated citizens to present themselves as potential targets by gathering in greater numbers.
We know there is a threat of terrorism here in Australia and that there is a threat of terrorism right across the world, Andrews said. We have recently witnessed that in both the United Kingdom and in New Zealand.
She was referring to Australian white supremacist Brenton Tarrant, who killed 51 worshippers at two New Zealand mosques in 2019.
The following year, a major report found New Zealand’s intelligence agencies had been far too focused on the threat posed by Islamic extremism at the expense of other threats including white supremacism.
Australia’s counter-terror intelligence chief Mike Burgess warned in August that Australians as young as 16 were being radicalised to support a white-power race war, and that half of the Australian Security Intelligence Organisation’s most important domestic anti-terrorism cases now involve neo-Nazi cells and other ideologically motivated groups.
Burgess, director-general of ASIO, said the shift in the national security threat away from religiously motivated terrorism was being fuelled by disinformation surrounding the COVID-19 pandemic and other global events.
Andrews said listing The Base which is active in the United States, Canada, Europe and Australia and Hezbollah as terrorist organisations brought Australia into line with international partners including the U.S., Canada and Britain.
She said her decision to list the two organisations was not taken lightly. The threats posed by both groups are real and credible, she said.
She described the numbers of Hezbollah and The Base supporters in Australia as fluid.
I have sufficient information in front of me to be concerned and to understand that The Base meets the threshold for listing as a terrorist organisation, Andrews said.
We are aware of their activities within Australia and overseas, and we will continue to monitor them and their activities. We will look closely at their membership and we will take action once they are fully listed under the Criminal Code, she added.
Andrews wrote to state and territory governments to consult on the two proposed listings. She said she aimed to finalise the listings as soon as possible.
Lebanese Ambassador to Australia Milad Raad was not immediately available for comment.