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ABC News
ABC News
World
Andrew Greene, Jessica Longbottom and Emma Younger

Melbourne CBD Christmas bomb plot foiled by ASIO rookie's chance encounter

ASIO director general Duncan Lewis revealed the young officer had made the chance encounter.

The country's spy boss has detailed the extraordinary chance encounter between one of his young female employees and a group of accused jihadis, which allowed police to stop one of Australia's largest planned terror attacks.

Details of how the rookie ASIO officer helped to foil the terror cell can be revealed for the first time after a court lifted a suppression order.

Abdullah Chaarani, 27, Ahmed Mohamed, 25, and Hamza Abbas, 23, face a possible sentence of life imprisonment for their roles in the plot.

The jury took just over six days to deliver their verdict on November 2, after a lengthy trial that heard the men had purchased machetes as well as metal pipes, light globes and batteries to make explosives, and had tried to obtain guns.

ASIO director general Duncan Lewis has detailed how a woman who had only just joined the domestic spy agency, spotted a group of young Melbourne men "performing in an unusual way" in the days leading up to Christmas 2016.

"The Christmas crowds were gathering and we, as the result of the exertions of a young ASIO officer, a young woman who'd been with us for about five minutes, one of our analysts, had noticed a group of young men performing in an unusual way and going to a chemist's shop very late at night," he said.

"They were in fact picking up the precursors for explosives. That was all the lead we needed."

His comments were made in a September address to military officials at the Land Forces conference in Adelaide, but for legal reasons they can only be publicly reported now.

During the men's trial, the prosecution detailed the steps the men took to plan the attack.

In early October 2016, both Mohamed and Chaarani conducted internet research on how to make improvised explosive devices (IEDs), including accessing an article about bombmaking in an Al Qaeda publication.

They made two trips to Bunnings in Broadmeadows, in Melbourne's north, in November and December to purchase supplies.

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