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		Australian opposition leader says his home was the target of an alleged 
		bomb plot
		[April 11, 2025]  
		By ROD McGUIRK 
		MELBOURNE, Australia (AP) — Australian opposition leader Peter Dutton 
		confirmed on Friday that his family home had been the target of an 
		alleged bomb plot, but said concerns for his personal safety did not 
		restrict his election campaigning.
 Dutton is campaigning to replace Prime Minister Anthony Albanese at 
		elections on May 3. Both leaders are accompanied in public by Australian 
		Federal Police security teams as they crisscross the country for weeks.
 
 “I’m incredibly grateful to the AFP that my family are kept safe. I’ve 
		never felt unsafe one day in this job, particularly with the protection 
		from the AFP. It hasn’t stopped me from doing anything, and it won’t on 
		this campaign,” Dutton told reporters in Perth.
 
 “This job is about a test of character: Do you have the strength of 
		character regardless of what’s thrown at you to deal with the issues and 
		to act in our country’s best interests?” Dutton added.
 
 Teenage boy charged with terror plot
 
 Dutton’s security came into focus after a 16-year-old boy was ordered on 
		Thursday to stand trial in the Queensland state Supreme Court in 
		Brisbane charged with planning a terrorist act.
 
 The boy was arrested in August last year and cannot be named because of 
		his age. He faces a potential life sentence if convicted.
 
 Dutton’s home, where he lives with his wife and three children on 
		Brisbane’s outskirts, had been the target of the alleged plot involving 
		explosives and a drone, unnamed sources told The Australian newspaper on 
		Friday.
 
 Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said he had reached out to Dutton over 
		the news. Albanese said he had also been the target of a “pretty serious 
		incident,” but declined to elaborate.
 
 “It is a fact that the number of threats that have been made to 
		parliamentarians has increased in recent times,” Albanese told reporters 
		in Darwin.
 
 
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            Australian opposition leader Peter Dutton speaks at the West 
			Australian Leadership Matters breakfast, in Perth on Friday, April 
			11, 2025. (Mick Tsikas/AAP Image via AP) 
            
			
			 
		“There’s no place whatsoever in politics for any of this and I have 
		ensured that any time any member of parliament, regardless of who they 
		are, have asked for support, that that have received it,” Albanese 
		added.
 Threats against Australian lawmakers on the rise
 
 Albanese’s Sydney office is one of several lawmakers’ offices that have 
		been vandalized by pro-Palestinian activists since the Israel-Hamas war 
		began in 2023.
 
 Australian Federal Police Commissioner Reece Kershaw told a senate 
		committee last month that police responded to 1,009 threats against 
		lawmakers in the 2023-24 fiscal year.
 
 That total was on track to be surpassed in the current fiscal year, 
		which began in July 2024, with 712 threats reported by March, he said.
 
 Dutton’s conservative Liberal Party campaign spokesperson James Paterson 
		said the opposition leader’s family “require around-the-clock personal 
		police protection.”
 
 Dutton said he had been receiving the same level of protection as a 
		prime minister since 2014 when he was made minister for immigration and 
		border protection and began deporting criminals.
 
 “I canceled the visas of a lot of bikies and rapists and organized crime 
		figures and I wouldn’t change that,” Dutton said. “There’s been an 
		impact on my family. They’ve been stoic and never complained about the 
		security that’s been around me and my family.”
 
			
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