Sydney / AFP
A firebomb attack outside an Australian mosque while worshippers were at prayer was condemned on Wednesday by Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull, with one Islamic leader calling it a “hate crimeâ€.
No one was injured in Tuesday night’s blast which destroyed a car parked outside a mosque and Islamic college in the Perth suburb of Thornlie.
“It is believed an accelerant was used to start the fire,†Western Australian police said in a statement, adding that three other vehicles were damaged in the incident.
“Anti-Islamic graffiti was located spray painted on a wall associated with the college, near the damaged vehicles.â€
The mosque’s Yahya Adel Ibrahim said the community in Perth had been visited “by hate†but would not retaliate by “hating and playing blame gamesâ€.
“This, undoubtedly is a criminal act of hate, but it is the act of a person or group not the greater whole,†he said on Facebook. “Despite what just transpired, everyone stayed to finish their prayers, refusing to give into the terror that had just occurred.†Anti-Islam sentiment became more prominent in Australia last year as concerns mounted over homegrown extremism and citizens travelling to Iraq and Syria to support extremist groups.
But Turnbull, who faces a general election on Saturday, said Australia had a fundamental foundation of mutual respect. “I deplore and I cannot condemn strongly enough any attacks of that kind,†he told radio station 6PR.
Australian Islamic College executive principal Abdullah Khan said while the attack came as a shock, he had been reassured by the support from the community.