Australian police shoot dead teen after stabbing attack

police inside Australia A knifeman was shot dead after that teen stabbed a man in the west coast city of Perth,

16 years old attacked the victim Police officers were attacked in the parking lot of a hardware store in suburban Willetton on Saturday night before being shot and killed, Western Australia Premier Roger Cook said.

Authorities said the boy had been radicalized online and that before the attack they had received calls from concerned members of the local Muslim community.

Police said the attack had “characteristics” of terrorism but it has not yet been declared a terrorist act. Mr Cook said: “But I want to reassure the community that at this stage it appears he acted completely and alone.”

The victim, a man aged around 30, was found at the scene with a knife wound to his back. He was taken to hospital in a serious but stable condition, a police statement said.

Western Australian Police Commissioner Colonel Blanch said police received an emergency call just after 10pm (local time) from a teenager who said he was going to commit an act of violence.

They said the boy was participating in a program for youth at risk of radicalization.

“I don’t want to say that he has been radicalized or radicalized because I think that’s part of the investigation,” he said.

Police said they were later alerted by a phone call from a member of the public that a knife attack Was walking in the parking lot. Three police officers responded, one armed with a gun and two equipped with powered energy devices.

Mr Blanch said members of the local Muslim community had raised concerns about the teenager’s behavior to police.

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said he had been given the latest information knife In Perth. “I have been advised that based on the information available there is no threat to the community,” Mr Albanese said.

“We are a peace-loving nation and there is no place for violent extremism in Australia,” he said.

The imam of Perth’s largest mosque, the Nasser Mosque, condemned the stabbings. Imam Syed Wadud Janood said, “There is no place for violence in Islam.”

He said, “We appreciate the efforts of the police to keep our communities safe. I also want to appreciate the local Muslim community who identified the man earlier with the police.”

The incident comes as New South Wales Police last month charged several boys with terrorism-related offenses following the stabbing of an Assyrian Christian bishop while he was delivering a live-streamed sermon in Sydney on April 15. Were.

The attack on Bishop came just days after six people were killed in a stabbing incident in the Sydney beach suburb of Bondi.

Additional reporting by agencies.