Austria tries 14-year-old 'terror' suspect of Turkish origin

Austria tries 14-year-old 'terror' suspect of Turkish origin

SANKT-POELTEN, Austria - Agence France-Presse
Austria tries 14-year-old terror suspect of Turkish origin

In this photo released on Sept. 29, 2014 by a militant website, which has been verified and is consistent with other AP reporting, an Islamic State group fighter holds his AK-47 machine gun as he relaxes on the bank of the Euphrates river in Raqqa, Syria. AP Photo

A 14-year-old Austrian schoolboy with alleged ties to Islamist extremists and accused of intending to bomb a Vienna train station went on trial May 26 facing up to five years in prison.

The defendant, named only as Mertkan G., was arrested in October 2014 when he was 14 and allegedly had contact with supporters of the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) jihadist group and Al-Qaeda, the court in his hometown Sankt-Poelten said.
 
"In addition he is suspected of obtaining instructions on how to make an explosive device from an Al-Qaeda website... in order to carry out an attack in Vienna," the court 70 kilometres (45 miles) west of the Austrian capital said.
 
According to the charge sheet, the teenager, who emigrated from Turkey in 2007, wanted to carry out the attack before travelling to join "holy war" in Syria and was in contact with ISIL recruiters in Vienna.
 
Police had said at the time of the arrest that the boy made "concrete enquiries about buying ingredients" for a bomb and "planned to explode the devices in public places, such as the Vienna Westbahnhof," a major train station.
 
His lawyer Rudolf Mayer told AFP that his client had only been "playing with the idea" of making a bomb. He has been in custody since January after breaking the terms of his parole.    

Unconfirmed press reports said that ISIL jihadists had offered to pay him 25,000 euros ($27,250) if he managed to carry out the attack.
 
In common with other European countries, Austria has seen a steady flow of people leaving or attempting to leave the country in order to join ISIL militants in Syria and Iraq.
 
According to the Austrian interior ministry, more than 200 have done so, including some women and minors. Around 70 have since returned, several of whom are in custody awaiting trial.