Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said he had raised the country's
threat level following advice from security services, but said
there was no imminent threat of an attack.
"The advice that we have received is that more Australians are
embracing a more diverse range of extreme ideologies and it is
our responsibility to be vigilant," he told a news conference.
Australia lowered the threat level to "possible" in 2022,
following eight years at "probable".
Mike Burgess, director general of the Australian Security
Intelligence Organization, the country's main intelligence
agency, said tensions in the Middle East, including a conflict
between Israel and Hamas that began on Oct. 7, were a
contributing factor to raising the threat level.
"The conflict has fuelled grievances, promoted protests,
undermined social cohesion and elevated intolerance," he said.
Australia has seen several violent attacks in recent months,
some of which have been designated as motivated by extremism.
In April Australian police said a knife attack on an Assyrian
church bishop and some of his followers in Sydney was a
terrorist act motivated by suspected religious extremism.
(Reporting by Alasdair Pal in Sydney; Editing by Michael Perry)
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