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Australian prisoner carves Islamic State slogan ‘e4e’ on cellmate’s head

His cellmate used a razor blade to carve “e4e” into his head, an apparent reference to the Islamic State group’s “eye for an eye” mantra, before placing a towel on his face and pouring boiling water over him.

Updated on: Apr 11, 2016 08:51 PM IST
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A radicalised prisoner allegedly carved an Islamic State slogan into the forehead of a fellow inmate in Australia, reports said Monday, but officials denied extremism was a problem in the jail system.

The radicalised prisoner carved “e4e” into his cellmate’s head, an apparent reference to the Islamic State group’s “eye for an eye” mantra. (Reuters file)
The radicalised prisoner carved “e4e” into his cellmate’s head, an apparent reference to the Islamic State group’s “eye for an eye” mantra. (Reuters file)

The 18-year-old, named as Bourhan Hraichie, has been charged with causing grievous bodily harm and intentional choking following the incident after lockdown at the medium-security Kempsey prison north of Sydney last week.

He reportedly assaulted his cellmate then used a razor blade to carve “e4e” into his head, an apparent reference to the Islamic State group’s “eye for an eye” mantra, before placing a towel on his face and pouring boiling water over him.

The cellmate, who was rushed to hospital with injuries to his head and burns to the face, was initially reported to be a former soldier, although officials later distanced themselves from the claim.

New South Wales corrections minister David Elliott said he was outraged by the alleged attack.

The manager of the facility has been suspended but the state’s Corrective Services commissioner Peter Severin denied Islamic radicalisation was a big problem in the prison system.

“What we are dealing with is not a systemic issue,” he told the Sydney Daily Telegraph.

“Yes, we have a range of inmates who are clearly at risk of being radicalised, but we also have robust strategies.”

Steve McMahon, a spokesman for the public sector association, which represents prison guards, told reporters Hraichie should have been segregated.

“The 18-year-old, in our belief, had presented enough information and bad behaviour to have been segregated, or at the very least, been put in a single cell,” he said.

The teenager, who has been transferred to a maximum security prison, is due to face court in May.

Canberra has been increasingly concerned about home-grown extremism and raised its terror threat alert level to high in September 2014. It has conducted a series of counter-terrorism raids in several cities over the past 18 months.

Hraichie was reportedly not in jail for terror-related offences.

 
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