Australia Seeking to Confirm Death of Top ISIS Member

Australia Seeking to Confirm Death of Top ISIS Member

(AFP) Canberra is seeking to confirm reports the most senior Australian Islamic State recruit has been killed, Foreign Minister Julie Bishop said Wednesday, as the Senate passed tough new foreign fighter laws.

The Australian Broadcasting Corporation said Afghan-born Mohammad Ali Baryalei, reportedly a former nightclub bouncer and aspiring actor, was believed to have died in fighting in recent days.

Baryalei has been accused of ordering “demonstration killings” in Australia, including beheading a random member of the public.

Bishop said the government was urging young Australians not to become radicalised as she defended new foreign fighter legislation designed to prevent citizens from travelling overseas to take part in conflicts.

The government legislation, which passed the upper house Senate on Wednesday, prohibits travel to terrorist hot spots without a valid reason.

The offence carries a maximum penalty of 10 years in prison.

The bill still has to be passed by the lower House of Representatives but is expected to go through easily as it has bipartisan support.

Authorities believe about 60 Australians are fighting alongside militants overseas, including one Sydney man who posed for photos with severed heads.

Fifteen Australians, including two suicide bombers, are already thought to have died fighting in Syria and Iraq, Australia’s then intelligence chief David Irvine said in late August.

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