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FAMILY connections and friendships are at the core of the terrorist networks active in Australia over the past 12 years, a Monash University researcher has found.
Most of the 57 people identified were recruited through close contact with friends or relatives in extremist groups.
Shandon Harris-Hogan drew maps of the links between violent jihadis in Australia, including people deported on security grounds, or reported missing or dead while engaged in terrorist activities overseas.
The pattern he found is in keeping with studies of Fatah, Hamas, Hezbollah, Palestinian Islamic Jihad and Turkish terrorists, which revealed that about one in five involved individuals were direct kin, while seven in 10 were close friends as youths.
''You keep getting the same names,'' he said. ''A lot have intermarried … and have been convicted or involved in the same plots together.''
Mr Harris-Hogan, who had access to transcripts of police recordings from Operation Pendennis, Australia's biggest terrorism investigation, found within the 15-member Melbourne cell led by Abdul Nacer Benbrika, now in jail, was a clique including brothers, a cousin and a close childhood friend of Fadl Sayadi, a Benbrika lieutenant.
Mr Harris-Hogan warned against stereotyping families and said some disapproving relatives had talked extremists into dropping out of radical groups.
Of the 57 jihadists whose backgrounds he has studied, 24 trained in a camp in Afghanistan, Pakistan, Lebanon, Somalia, Yemen, Malaysia or the Philippines. Since a US clampdown on militia camps in Afghanistan, Pakistan and Iraq, the focus has shifted to Lebanon and Somalia, he found.
His colleague at the university's Global Terrorism Research Centre, Andrew Zammit, has found that six in 10 of those who have faced terrorism charges in Australia have been Muslims of Lebanese descent, a phenomenon unique to this country.
Original piece is http://www.theage.com.au/national/terror-groups-family-links-revealed-20120205-1qztl.html