BERWICK STAR NEWS
Home » Project target IS

Project target IS

By CAM LUCADOU-WELLS

A ’HACKATHON’ project will be set up in Melbourne’s south-east to help deter young Muslims from violent extremism.
The area has been identified as a hotspot for action after radicalised teenager Numan Haider was shot dead by police outside Endeavour Hills Police Station and fellow Lyndale Secondary College student Irfaan Hussein Hussein was reportedly killed in Syria fighting for Islamic State.
The MYHACK hackathon is the brainchild of anti-terrorism academic Dr Anne Aly and is backed by LaTrobe federal MP Jason Wood.
It will challenge teams of young people of Muslim and non-Muslim backgrounds to come up with solutions to stop youths being lured into Daesh, otherwise called Islamic State.
Mr Wood has called for more action on the issue of radicalised youth from Islamic community leaders.
“By all account leaders of Islamic communities in Australia are doing their best to discourage this kind of involvement, but much like how people also argue that it’s a parents’ responsibility to guide their children away from drugs, sometimes things happen right under their noses which they’re unaware of.”
He said he liked the MYHACK “concept of youth being the agents of change for their own generation”.
“The great aspect of this program is that the young people come up with practical solutions – particularly when it comes to online solutions which is the space that Daesh primarily use to recruit our youth.
“At least four ideas will come out of it which will then be turned in to practical measures,” he said.
Islamic Council of Victoria secretary Seyfi Seyit said he needed to find out more about the hackathon.
“I’m sceptical about those types of ideas. It’s crucial it has the right framework, otherwise it’s just an experiment without sustainability.”
He said the “real solution” lay in strengthening social cohesion.
Mr Seyit said many young Muslims felt “this society doesn’t really accept them”; of them a tiny minority” were being radicalised.
He said factors included mental health, family breakdown, unease with the Syrian conflict, rising Islamophobia and the IS propaganda machine.
He labelled the IS online campaign as “very clever marketing” and “very effective for a small percentage of young impressionable people”.
“Some of these young people think it’s cool to be keyboard warriors.
“It’s a chance for them to vent their anger.
“Face to face, they are shy and unable to express themselves. Behind a keyboard they get into arguments – it’s a feeling of empowerment, a type of euphoria.”
He said the Muslim community needed to take leadership to support their youth.
“If we don’t, we’ve failed them.”
He admitted the issue was “overwhelming” and required Islamic Council and State Government guidance and finding the “right people” in the community to tackle the issue.
“As a community, they don’t know where to start.
“Most of the community are fairly average. We don’t have sophisticated skills working in the community in this way, skills in radicalisation and strategic planning.
“They’re overwhelmed, these young people are popping out of the blue.”

Digital Editions


More News

  • Councillor withdraws legal case against CEO

    Councillor withdraws legal case against CEO

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 442319 A legal case by a City of Greater Dandenong councillor against the council’s CEO has been dropped just two days before the hearing,…

  • Casey residents surveyed to guide community wellness

    Casey residents surveyed to guide community wellness

    Some Casey locals might get their chance at providing critical feedback and insights and in turn, help the council shape the future of health and wellbeing in their area. Over…

  • Cracking start to the year

    Cracking start to the year

    **There are different ways of breaking a cricket bat. TOORADIN star Cal O’Hare has done it twice the conventional way; basically being too good for his own good; breaking two…

  • Cricket, Cranny and Carlos

    Cricket, Cranny and Carlos

    BLAIR: Well fellas, we’re back for Let’s Talk Sport and there’s no shortage of things to chat about. Cricket season is getting to the pointy end and we’ve had plenty…

  • Two-hour police pursuit ends in jail

    Two-hour police pursuit ends in jail

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 481350 A Frankston serial car thief has been jailed for up to 26 months after a perilous, two-hour police pursuit across the South East.…

  • Empowering migrant water safety

    Empowering migrant water safety

    Dr Harpreet Singh Kandra often recalls the story of his nearly fatal drowning when he was a boy. The community volunteer and academic at Federation University, remembers the moment he…

  • Vengeful tenant jailed after arson spree

    Vengeful tenant jailed after arson spree

    An evicted tenant who inflicted a series of firebombing attacks against her ex-housemates and landlord has been jailed for at least four years. Tsai-Wei Hung, 33, pleaded guilty at the…

  • Casey commuters say Metro Tunnel trips now harder

    Casey commuters say Metro Tunnel trips now harder

    Casey commuters say the new Metro Tunnel service on the Cranbourne and East Pakenham lines has made travelling to the city more time-consuming, less convenient, and stressful. The changes have…

  • What’s on

    What’s on

    Rock in the outdoors Two powerhouses of Australian rock Kutcha and Cash Savage & The Last Drinks in a unique collaboration. Supported by Canisha. Part of a free six-week outdoor…

  • Peak-hour fault strands Cranbourne and Pakenham commuters

    Peak-hour fault strands Cranbourne and Pakenham commuters

    Afternoon-peak commuters on the Cranbourne and East Pakenham lines were stuck in the trains without air conditioning for up to two and a half hours last night, after a fault…