Australian faces over 1 year in jail for spitting at Indonesian imam

An Australian man faces over a year in jail for spitting at an Indonesian imam in the city of Bandung, pictured. (Wikimedia Commons)
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Updated 30 April 2023
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Australian faces over 1 year in jail for spitting at Indonesian imam

  • Brenton Craig Abbas Abdullah McArthur claims he was victim of racism
  • Imam Basri Anwar suggests McArthur ‘disturbed’ by Qur’an recitation over loudspeaker

LONDON: An Australian man captured on CCTV allegedly spitting in the face of an imam in Indonesia could spend more than one year in jail.

Footage purportedly of Brenton Craig Abbas Abdullah McArthur has gone viral on social media in the country. It shows him walking up to Basri Anwar, an imam at a mosque in Bandung, and engaging him in conversation before appearing to spit at him.

Anwar is then seen to run away while McArthur, wearing a baseball cap, leaves the mosque.

Police said McArthur, originally from Perth, Western Australia, and whose visa had expired, was tracked to Soekarno-Hatta Airport, where he was arrested attempting to board a flight home.

Budi Sartono, chief of Bandung’s local police, said: “We immediately asked immigration to stop him and cancel him from leaving the country.

“We immediately picked him up at the airport and took him to Bandung police station for interrogation.”

Kumparan, a local media website, said McArthur, who was accompanied to the police station by Australian consular officials, had been charged under laws relating to carrying out “unpleasant acts and insults,” which carry up to 14 months in jail.

On Instagram, he denied any wrongdoing, claiming he had been the victim of racism.

McArthur said: “Stop crying all your racist tears. I am a Muslim, and this is just racist, threatening a bule (Indonesian term for a foreigner) and laughing being a coward.”

Anwar told an Indonesian news site he believed McArthur was “disturbed” by a recitation of the Qur’an over a loudspeaker.

A spokesperson for Australia’s Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade said it was ready to provide consular assistance to an Australian man detained in Indonesia.


Federal immigration agents fatally shoot second person in Minneapolis

Updated 4 sec ago
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Federal immigration agents fatally shoot second person in Minneapolis

  • Border Patrol agents fired in defense at a man who approached them with a handgun and two magazines
  • Minneapolis Police Chief Brian O’Hara said the man was a 37-year-old city resident who was believed to be a US citizen

MINNEAPOLIS, USA: Federal agents shot and killed a man in Minneapolis on Saturday, local and federal officials said, the second fatal shooting involving federal agents this month during a surge in immigration enforcement in the northern US city.
The US Department of Homeland Security said Border Patrol agents fired in defense at a man who approached them with a handgun and two magazines.


Minneapolis Police Chief Brian O’Hara said the man was a 37-year-old city resident who was believed to be a US citizen. He did not release the name of the ⁠man, who he said was a lawful gun owner with no criminal record.
A video circulating on social media and aired on cable news stations showed people wearing masks and tactical vests wrestling with a man on a snow-covered street before shots are heard. In the video, the man falls to the ground, and several more shots are heard.
Later, video from the area showed immigration agents deploying tear gas on a growing ⁠crowd of onlookers.

MAYOR, GOVERNOR CALL FOR OPERATION TO END
Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey called for an immediate end to the Trump administration’s immigration enforcement operations in the state.
“How many more residents, how many more Americans need to die or get badly hurt for this operation to end?” Frey said at a news conference.
The state’s governor and two US senators also called for federal agents to leave.
Trump has been briefed on the shooting, a White House official told Reuters.
O’Hara said there was a “volatile scene” at the site of the shooting and asked people to avoid the area.
“Please do not destroy our city,” he said.
The nearby Minneapolis Institute of Art ⁠said it had closed for the day due to safety concerns.
The shooting came one day after more than 10,000 people took to the frigid streets to protest the presence of the 3,000 federal agents who have been ordered to the state by Trump.
Residents have been angered by several incidents, including the killing of US citizen Renee Good, the detention of a US citizen who was taken from his home in his underwear, and the detention of school children, including a 5-year-old boy.
On Thursday, Vice President JD Vance visited Minneapolis to show support for immigration officers and to ask local leaders and activists to reduce tensions, saying US Immigration and Customs Enforcement was carrying out an important mission to detain immigration violators.