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Australia mosque hit by firebombing, graffiti attack

This ABC photo shows a car that exploded outside a mosque in Australia's Perth on June 28, 2016.

A firebombing and anti-Islam graffiti attack has happened outside a mosque in the Australian city of Perth while hundreds of worshipers were attending a prayer service inside.

The blast destroyed a car parked outside the Thornlie mosque and Australian Islamic College on Tuesday night in Perth’s suburb of Thornlie. No one was injured in the incident.

The mosque's Yahya Adel Ibrahim said on his Facebook page that the Perth community had been visited by “hate”.

“Thankfully our community won’t start hating and playing blame games and singling out groups of people in our society. This, undoubtedly is a criminal act of hate, but it is the act of a person or group not the greater whole,” he said.

He also said that despite the attack, “everyone stayed to finish their prayers, refusing to give into the terror that had just occurred."

According to a police spokeswoman, three people were seen running down a way near the mosque after the blast.

"It is believed an accelerant was used to start the fire," the spokeswoman also said, adding that three other vehicles were damaged in the explosion.

"Anti-Islamic graffiti was located spray painted on a wall associated with the college, near the damaged vehicles," she added.

Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull condemned the attack, saying the country is “founded on a fundamental, a foundation of mutual respect. It's the golden rule ... I deplore and I cannot condemn strongly enough any attacks of that kind.”

Foreign Minister Julie Bishop said the attack “would appear to be motivated by political events.”


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