3 ISIS-Inspired Men Sentenced for Australia Terror Plot

FILE PHOTO: A row of newly built apartment blocks is seen in the suburb of Epping, Sydney, Australia February 1, 2019. REUTERS/Tom Westbrook/File Photo
FILE PHOTO: A row of newly built apartment blocks is seen in the suburb of Epping, Sydney, Australia February 1, 2019. REUTERS/Tom Westbrook/File Photo
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3 ISIS-Inspired Men Sentenced for Australia Terror Plot

FILE PHOTO: A row of newly built apartment blocks is seen in the suburb of Epping, Sydney, Australia February 1, 2019. REUTERS/Tom Westbrook/File Photo
FILE PHOTO: A row of newly built apartment blocks is seen in the suburb of Epping, Sydney, Australia February 1, 2019. REUTERS/Tom Westbrook/File Photo

Three men were given lengthy prison sentences on Friday for an ISIS-inspired terror plot to cause mass casualties in Australia's second largest city Melbourne during the 2016 Christmas period.

Hamza Abbas, 24, Ahmed Mohamed, 27 and Abdullah Chaarani, 29, were found guilty last year of plotting to use machetes and homemade bombs to target major sites -- including a train station and a church -- in a December attack.

In handing down the sentences at the Supreme Court of Victoria, judge Christopher Beale said the men had been accessing online material supportive of ISIS and extremism in the lead-up to their arrest.

Beale said the men came to believe their planned "mass slaughter of innocent civilians" would be a "glorious act".

"The stupidity of that belief was only matched by its malevolence," Beale said.

Abbas, who was involved in the conspiracy for a shorter time, was jailed for 22 years with a non-parole period of 16 years and six months. Mohamed and Chaarani, who were facing their second terror charge, were jailed for 38 years.

Police uncovered the plot after monitoring the Australian-born men's phone conversations, text messages and emails, and all four were arrested on December 22, 2016.

During a plea hearing before Beale last month, Mohamed and Chaarani claimed they had renounced ISIS and had worked toward deradicalization since their arrest.

Then-prime minister Malcolm Turnbull called their plans "one of the most substantial terrorist plots that have been disrupted over the last several years".



Four Workers Dead in Japan After Manhole Fall

 People visit a park on a hot day in Tokyo on July 26, 2025. (AFP)
People visit a park on a hot day in Tokyo on July 26, 2025. (AFP)
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Four Workers Dead in Japan After Manhole Fall

 People visit a park on a hot day in Tokyo on July 26, 2025. (AFP)
People visit a park on a hot day in Tokyo on July 26, 2025. (AFP)

Four workers have died in Japan after falling into a manhole near Tokyo as they inspected sewage pipes, authorities said Sunday.

The incident comes after a huge sinkhole swallowed a truck driver near the capital in January after a road collapsed because of corroded sewage pipes, sparking a nationwide inspection.

The workers -- all men in their fifties -- were checking pipes in the city of Gyoda north of Tokyo on Saturday when one fell down the manhole, followed by three more who tried to save him, the local fire department told AFP.

The department said rescuers detected hydrogen sulfide -- a gas toxic in high concentrations -- coming out of the manhole.

But city officials refused to be drawn on the cause of the initial fall.

"Detailed circumstances leading up to the accident are still unknown, so it's too early for us to say anything about our responsibility," a Gyoda city official said on condition of anonymity.

The four workers were retrieved and taken to the hospital where they were pronounced dead, according to local media reports.

Around 10 workers were at the scene of the inspection, ordered to clean the pipes of wastewater and sludge if necessary.

In May Japanese rescuers recovered the body of the dead 74-year-old truck driver months after he was swallowed by the road collapse in the city of Yashio.