Aaron Bunch Journalist with Australian Associated Press | Collection of published work | + 61 484 008 119 | abunch@aap.com.au

Aaron Bunch
Accused jihadist Prakash in Darwin court

Melbourne-born Neil Prakash, who is accused of travelling to Syria to fight with Islamic State, is set to appear in a Darwin court over terrorism charges.

December 2, 2022

Accused Islamic State jihadist Neil Prakash – once considered the country’s most wanted terrorist – is set to appear in a Darwin court to face charges that could see him behind bars for life.

The Melbourne-born former rapper was arrested and jailed in Turkey after allegedly flying to Syria to fight with Islamic State.

The 31-year-old was flown to the Northern Territory on a charter flight on Friday morning ahead of his first court appearance via video-link in Australia.

Australian Federal Police officers will apply to have him transferred to Victoria and charged with terrorism offences.

Prakash could face a life sentence if found guilty.

In 2016, he was wrongly thought to have been killed in a US military strike in the Iraqi city of Mosul. However, later the same year Australian officials confirmed he was still alive and had been arrested in Turkey.

Former home affairs minister Peter Dutton revoked Prakash’s citizenship in 2018 over his alleged ISIS participation and on the grounds he was Fijian.

Fijian immigration officials insisted Prakash, born to a Fijian father, had never held nor sought citizenship and refused to take him into the country.

Prakash rose to prominence over his alleged links to several terror plots in Australia and his use of social media to lure potential recruits to Islamic State.

He was also listed in ISIS documents as one of the group’s top recruiters.

In a statement, the AFP said its officers maintained a thorough framework to manage Australians facing terrorism offences and there was no threat to the community.

Prakash was on the same flight as an alleged major Sydney underworld figure who fled Australia for Turkey while on trial for drug offences.

AFP assistant commissioner Nigel Ryan said any wanted Australians in Turkey would be extradited.

“We are relentless in relation to tracking down these people who seek to do harm in Australia,” Mr Ryan said earlier at a press conference in Sydney about another man deported from Turkey to face drug charges in NSW.

“We will relentlessly track them down, get them back and have them face justice here.”

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