on 12-07-2014 11:28 AM
Australian convicted terrorist Khaled Sharrouf reportedly continued to receive a disability pension months after arriving on the battlefields of Syria.
Sharrouf, who fled Australia for Syria using his brother's passport on December 6, continued to receive his disability support pension at least until February, about two months after he left Australia to join insurgents fighting the Syrian government, The Weekend Australian says.
The newspaper says revelations that the former Sydney man was paid his regular disability cheque - about $766 a fortnight - long after authorities knew he was gone raise the possibility that the taxpayer may have been inadvertently funding his activities.
It is not clear if Sharrouf accessed the money, the newspaper says, but his journey to Syria took him through Indonesia, Malaysia and Turkey, countries where he would have had ready access to any money paid into his bank account.
Sharrouf was jailed in 2005 for nearly four years for possessing six clocks and 140 batteries connected to a terrorist conspiracy in which 18 men were convicted over plans to attack targets in NSW and Victoria.
He's come full circle hasn't he?
The parents come here to escape war and terror and give their kids a better life. Then the kids go back to the old country keep the viscious circle going.
All at Aussie taxpayers expense.
Very disappointing.
on 12-07-2014 12:21 PM
Its not that easy to be granted DSP. There are a lot of hoops that you have to jump through. He might not have been granted DSP for a physical disability but for a mental disability.
on 12-07-2014 12:22 PM
@bluecat*dancing wrote:What is wrong to me is the short sentence he received for plotting terrorist attacks here. There is a certain amount of time that you can be out of the country while on DSP. This is being tightened up and the amount of time is being reduced.
that is not what you said
we should be giving hin nothing.
he should not be allowed to return either
if he gets shot, travel insurance won't cover that.........he'll probably expect us to fly him home, which i believe should not be here
on 12-07-2014 12:24 PM
I doubt if terrorist groups would care if a willing member is disabled or not.
So not sure why people are questioning his ability to recieve the pension. The issue of his disability pension (which from articles doesn't make clear if it was accessed but does make clear it was stopped in a timely manner) is separate from the issue of terrorist activities.
I can't imagine what would fill the pages of Murdoch newspapers if a handful of islamic bad eggs weren't around to keep their 'journalists' in a job.
By all means report on the seriousness of any Australian involved in terrorist activities. All of us need to know about this. But why devalue that information with silly information about pensions?
on 12-07-2014 12:27 PM
@i-need-a-martini wrote:I doubt if terrorist groups would care if a willing member is disabled or not.
So not sure why people are questioning his ability to recieve the pension. The issue of his disability pension (which from articles doesn't make clear if it was accessed but does make clear it was stopped in a timely manner) is separate from the issue of terrorist activities.
I can't imagine what would fill the pages of Murdoch newspapers if a handful of islamic bad eggs weren't around to keep their 'journalists' in a job.
By all means report on the seriousness of any Australian involved in terrorist activities. All of us need to know about this. But why devalue that information with silly information about pensions?
why are we paying a pension to a conviced terrorist?
they had australian targets.......meaning wanted to kill Australians.......he should be getting nothing
on 12-07-2014 12:27 PM
on 12-07-2014 12:29 PM
I thought the thread was about him being paid a pension while out of the country and funding terrorist activity too................. silly me.
on 12-07-2014 12:29 PM
If he is eligible for the DSP then he is entitled to receive it, whether he morally should or not is another matter. Is the issue that he is a convicted terrorist or on DSP? Then there is airport security. He was allowed to leave the country using his brother's passport. That is more of a concern to me than a few thousand bucks.
on 12-07-2014 12:29 PM
on 12-07-2014 12:31 PM
Yes they may have a mental disorder, but the same applies.
The test is one of capacity. That is ability/inability to do things.
Now I was in the military for 20 years and am quite aware of both the physical and mental demands that combat operations place on the individual, and the mere fact that it appears he is actively engaged in such operations indicates both a physical and mental capacity far in excess of what one should have and be entitled to the pension.
on 12-07-2014 12:40 PM
yes, maybe it's just me but try as i might to whip up some "disappointment" with a dash of "outrage" as one of those "aussie taxpayers" I just can't get past that other aussie tax payer funded bloke, you know the one on close to half a million (plus perks) who just this week managed to insult our WW11 veterans....maybe he has a different version of what "honour" means?
"Torture, starvation, murder and forced labour are not honourable.”