Australian schoolgirl faces charge of financing ISIS

CORRECTING DATE TO MONDAY FEB. 23 - This is a still taken from CCTV issued by the Metropolitan Police in London on Monday Feb. 23, 2015,  of 15-year-old Amira Abase, left,  Kadiza Sultana,16, centre, and Shamima Begum, 15, going through Gatwick airport, south of London, before they caught their flight to Turkey on Tuesday Feb 17, 2015. The three teenage girls left the country in a suspected bid to travel to Syria to join the Islamic State extremist group. (AP Photo/Metropolitan Police) NO ARCHIVE

This is a still taken from CCTV issued by the Metropolitan Police in London on Feb. 23, 2015, shows three teenage girls suspected of traveling to Syria to join the ISIS. In Australia, authorities are set to charge a 16-year-old schoolgirl of raising and sending funds to the Islamist terrorist group. AP FILE

SYDNEY, Australia — A 16-year-old schoolgirl was set to be charged Tuesday with raising money to support the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) group, Australian police said, warning of a “trend of teenage children” involved in such activities.

The girl and a 20-year-old man were arrested in the western Sydney suburb of Guildford in the morning and were due to be charged during the day, New South Wales state police Deputy Commissioner Catherine Burn said.

READ: Teen girls joining Isis jihadisIslamist ISIS slave markets sell girls at any price–UN envoy

“We will be alleging that they were involved in obtaining money to send offshore to assist the Islamic State in its activities,” Burn told reporters in Sydney.

“The 16-year-old girl is not somebody who is well-known to us, however it is disturbing that we are continuing to see a trend of teenage children involved in activities that they should really not be involved in at all.”

The pair were to face one charge each of getting funds to, from or for a terrorist organization. The maximum penalty on conviction is 25 years in prison.

Burn would not say how much they allegedly collected, but added that a “number of people in this country” were raising money to finance terrorism and then send it offshore.

Federal Police Deputy Commissioner for national security, Michael Phelan, said the alleged fundraising was not linked to any plot of an attack in Australia and there was no immediate threat to the community.

Canberra has been increasingly concerned about home-grown extremism and raised the terror threat alert level to high in September 2014.

Authorities have conducted a series of counter-terrorism raids in several cities, while the government has passed new national security laws.

Since September 2014, 14 people have been charged under Appleby, a rolling operation investigating people suspected of being involved in domestic acts of terrorism, Australians fighting in Syria and Iraq and the funding of terrorist organizations, Phelan said.

Burn said police were working to identify “all those things that might have been involved in her getting to this position”.

In December, five people including a 15-year-old boy were charged in Sydney over a terror plot targeting a government building.

And in October a civilian police employee was shot dead by a boy, also 15, outside police headquarters in western Sydney. The teenager was killed in an exchange of gunfire.

Read more...