Amid increasingly heated debates local Muslim leaders have rejected the prime minister’s allegations that the Australian Muslim “community is collectively culpable for the criminal actions of individuals”.
Grand Australian Mufti Ibrahim Abu Mohamed along with the presidents of the country's Islamic councils in Victoria and Queensland declined to attend a round-table discussion on anti-extremism measures with Prime Minister Scott Morrison.
In a letter they wrote on 21 November, it explained, that "many in the Muslim community…are deeply concerned and disappointed with statements made by senior Government Ministers and the Prime Minister in the recent past which infer that the community is collectively culpable for the criminal actions of individuals and should be doing more to prevent such acts of violence".
However, they called for Scott Morrison to ‘re-schedule the proposed Round Table meeting' with ‘a concrete agenda' and ‘acceptable objectives' agreed upon in advance.
Earlier this month Australian PM Morrison, speaking after a terror attack in Melbourne on 9 November said that the terrorist, who ‘who took a knife to another Australian…had been radicalised in' Australia. He said that the Muslim community's leaders have a ‘special responsibility' in fighting ‘the radical and dangerous ideology of extremist Islam', urging them to ‘call this out'.
On 9 November, Hassan Khalif Shire Ali, a Somali-born man, who was inspired by ISIS, according to the local police, stabbed to death one person, wounded two others, before being shot by the police.
*Daesh, also known as ISIS, Islamic State, ISIL is a terrorist group, banned in Russia