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Police members of the Australian counterterrorism team stand in front of a home in which they broke into an operation in which they arrested three men who were apparently preparing to attack. the public in Melbourne, Australia, 20 November 2018. AAP / David Crosling / via REUTERSReuters
SYDNEY (Reuters) – Police said Tuesday they had arrested three men who were apparently preparing to attack the public in Melbourne, less than two weeks after the killing of a man in Australia's second-largest city by an act of terrorism.
The Australian federal and state police, the Australian Security Intelligence Organization and other agencies in the joint anti-terrorism team made the arrests on Tuesday morning.
Police said three men aged 30, 26 and 21 were arrested after apparently seeking a semi-automatic weapon to carry out an attack.
The 21-year-old has been accused of planning a terrorist act, the police said.
All were Australian citizens and their passports had been canceled earlier this year.
"We now have enough evidence to prevent a terrorist attack," Graham Ashton, chief police commissioner for Victoria, told reporters.
Police said the suspects had not yet decided where to attack them but that they thought the act was imminent.
"They were definitely looking for a mass meeting place, where there would be crowds," Ashton said. "They were trying to focus on trying to have a place where they could kill as many people as possible."
Police said they thought the arrests had canceled any threat from the group.
Australia, a convinced ally of the United States that has sent troops to Afghanistan and Iraq, has been under increased alert since 2014 for attacks perpetrated by local militants returning from fighting in the Middle East or their followers.
Australia currently considers the likelihood of a militant attack as "likely", the middle point of a five-level threat ranking system. It has been set at this level since the implementation of the system in 2015.
Police said the three men were known to the authorities and their passports had been canceled, fearing to visit a conflict zone abroad.
The arrests took place less than two weeks after a man set fire to a pickup truck loaded with gas cylinders in central Melbourne and stabbed three people, killing one, before he was shot down by the police.
As in this attack, police said on Tuesday that the three men were inspired by the Islamic State rather than led by the militant group.
Police said the three suspects had no connection with the man responsible for the 9 November attack, although they intensified their preparations for the assault.
"Certainly, last week, they were stimulated to do something faster," Ashton said.
(Report by Wayne Cole, Colin Packham and Karishma Luthria Edited by Lincoln Feast and Paul Tait)
Copyright 2018 Thomson Reuters.