Militant Islam Monitor > Articles > Sudden Jihad Syndrome In Melbourne: Muslima Honors Student From Bangladesh Turns To Terror Sudden Jihad Syndrome In Melbourne: Muslima Honors Student From Bangladesh Turns To TerrorHow Momena Shoma Got A Visa For Study Abroad And Tried To Kill Her Australian Hosts Melbourne's Petite, Shy, Honors-Student Jihadi by Daniel Pipes
Melbourne
Like many newly-arrived foreign students, Momena turned to the Australian Homestay Network (AHN), "Australia's largest and leading homestay provider," to find a family with which to board. She quickly settled in a home in Bundoora, near the university. What could be more innocent? Anyone worrying about her being dangerous because of her Muslim faith would have been called out for racism, chauvinism, xenophobia, bigotry, and (that most dreadful of accusations) "Islamophobia." That she wore a burqa (the black full-body Islamic covering) only made such suspicions the more heinous.
Responding to her urgent need for accommodation, the Singaravelu family – husband and nightshift nurse Roger (56), wife Maha (45), and daughter Shayla (5) – on Feb. 7 welcomed Momena into their 4-bedroom house in Melbourne's Mill Park suburb for a few days until she found more permanent lodgings. Maha explained her motive in accepting Momena: "I felt for her, being in a foreign country. I put myself in her shoes and her parents' shoes."
Themselves immigrants from Malaysia, the Singaravelus had come to Australia 30 years ago, Roger explained, "to seek opportunity." They had hosted foreign students since 2014 in a spirit of multiculturalism, of giving back, and of teaching tolerance to their daughter. A neighbor, Neil Fitzroy, described the Singaravelus as engaging and open, taking in foreign students to give them "an Australian experience." Matters started well enough with Momena, Maha recalls: "She was very pleasant to deal with. She even offered to babysit our daughter if we ever went out." Roger concurs: "Shoma gave a good impression right up before the attack." He found her "well mannered" and noted that she spoke better English than he did. Growing up in Malaysia, a Muslim-majority country, Roger tells me, he and Maha "understand the norms that are embraced by Muslims." But AHN had not informed the family that Momena wore a burqa and her appearance, Roger recounts, "gave us a shock when she first arrived at our doorstep." That she "was constantly lifting the burqa during meal times" to get food into her mouth caused the family to feel "uncomfortable having meals together." Much less did AHN inform the couple about Momena having been thrown out of her prior homestay due to her practice at stabbing. And no one knew she had stolen the knife from the first homestay host. First AttackOn Feb. 9, after two days with the Singaravelus, Momena struck. At 4:25 p.m., with Maha out of the house and Roger napping on a mattress in the lounge, child in arms, wearing her burqa, she used her stolen knife to stab her host in the neck. But the under-five-foot woman lacked the strength to cut the much larger Roger's jugular vein, getting the knife only superficially into his neck – enough to make him bleed "like a fountain" but not enough to do him fatal damage. In his words: "I thought I was dreaming as I felt a sharp pain on my neck. I woke up and started screaming." He tried to pull the knife out as Momena leaned over him and pushed it in, yelling all the while, "Allahu Akbar." He noted that she "had such an intense look. Her eyes were so intense." At that point, Roger continues,
Finally, Roger prevailed and pulled the blade out. After that, he recalled to me, "I managed to grab hold of my 5-year-old daughter out of the house and rang Mustafa Osmanoski from my mobile, and he came to my aid immediately. When I managed to open the garage door, the neighbor across the road came to help me too." Mustafa, 76, a retired security guard of Macedonian origins, and his wife Safia for 20 minutes watched over a sullen and immobile Momena as she awaited arrest, slumped against the wall of the very room where her attack took place. The neighbors recount her saying that "It was a mission and that she had to do what she had to do." To the police, she calmly elaborated that she had come to Australia not to study but to kill "in the name of God." She expected that a knife stab to the neck "would be fatal." Seeing herself as a foot soldier of the Islamic State (ISIS), Momena had planned out the attack; indeed, before leaving Dhaka, she had told her younger sister Asmaul Husna, 22, of her murderous plan.
Momena had put herself in a jihadi mood that morning by watching a gruesome 55-minute ISIS video from 2014, Flames of War. The ABC paraphrased her testimony:
Her motive? Momena acknowledged bearing no "personal grudge" against Roger (who had spoken barely 50 words to her) but attacked him out of a sense of duty to "trigger the West": meaning, to spur non-Muslims to attack Muslims, possibly leading to the chaos that brings on the End of Days. She explained:
Consequences
At the Victoria Supreme Court in September, the judge compelled her to take off the niqab and show her face to establish her identity as she made her plea. This time, Momena pleaded guilty to engaging intentionally in a terrorist act "with the intention of advancing a political, religious or ideological cause, namely violent jihad." (The attempted murder charge was dropped.) Her sentencing will take place in January; the maximum penalty is life in prison. An online pollasked if she should be deported or incarcerated: after running for several weeks, the vote was overwhelmingly (84 to 16 percent) in favor of the former. Roger suffered cuts to his shoulder, severed tendons in his hand, and a ruptured vertebra in the neck. He recovered after surgery for injuries to his shoulder and neck. Testifying in April, he described the attack's "devastating effects" on his family. Shayla was traumatized by what she witnessed: "She continues to experience nightmares and flashbacks, and requires psychological treatment. She still sees blood on the wall and asks me to clean it off, although there is nothing there." Roger suffers too: "I was very close to death and I find building trust is not easy. I have become a recluse now and always sensitive to my surroundings following the incident. People with burqa tend to aggravate my condition." He suffers from post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). To compound these problems, Roger is going without pay and may soon be fired from the hospital. As he writes me:
It is plainly outrageous that Melbourne Health, Roger's employer and a major teaching hospital, has treated him so shabbily. Public and political pressure needs to be exerted on Melbourne Health to grant Roger the time he needs fully to recover and return to work. In sum, as Roger explained in a recent letter, all his and Maha's hopes "have been shattered by this act of cruelty! Our lives have not been the same and will never return to normal." Dhaka
By all accounts, Momena fit into the normal Muslim life of her elite family. Her father Mohammad Moniruzzaman, a chartered accountant, is senior vice president and a board member of the Janata Insurance Co. Ltd. Her uncle Mohammed Abdul Aziz is dean of the Faculty of Science at the University of Dhaka. She withdrew into a world defined by Islam only in 2012, her first year at NSU. No more music or movies for her; she demanded her family get rid of its television set and nagged women to cover themselves. Paraphrasing an Australian police report, the ABC found that Momena "felt like a prisoner in her own house," being the only family member to have become a Salafi Muslim. "She began following online preachers, including notorious Yemeni preacher Anwar al-Awlaki, and looking at Islamic State [ISIS] videos." The women's prayer room at NSU, an institution deeply associated with Islamism, became a central focus of her life. For example, jihadis linked to the murder of a secular blogger attended NSU, as did those who attacked a restaurant that left 29 dead and even one who attempted to blow up the Federal Reserve Bank in New York. At the height of ISIS' notoriety in 2014, Momena applied for a student visa for travel to Turkeyto take up a scholarship from Ankara's Atılım University, but probably really intending to join ISIS. However, the Turkish consulate in Dhaka turned her down, as it did about half the Bangladeshi student applicants. Momena may also have tried, unsuccessfully, to obtain visas for Tunisia and the United States. A Bangladeshi police report found that Momena's sister Asmaul Husna also became radicalized after their mother's death from diabetes in June 2015; the sisters together took to watching Al-Qaeda and ISIS videos. "Both sisters got inspired to devote [themselves] to jihad and vowed to fight for establishing an Islamic caliphate in Bangladesh." They joined a faction of Jamaat-ul-Mujahideen Bangladesh (JMB), an ISIS-linked jihadi group with a violent record dating back to 2005 (when it announced itself with 350 explosions in one hour) and culminating with the attack, mentioned above, killing 29 in a restaurant.
Bangladeshi police also found evidence (on Momena's smartphone and computer) pointing to an important jihadi connection in Australia: an unnamed female friend from an Islamic discussion group at NSU; the two them together communicated with ISIS recruiter Gazi Sohan. The female friend married a Bangladeshi resident in Australia and moved there after graduation in 2016. She stayed in steady electronic contact on WhatsApp, inciting each other with jihadi videos. The friend apparently convinced Momena to join her in Australia, leading to Momena's enrolling at La Trobe. The friend visited Dhaka in December, where the two rejoined their old Islamic discussion group at NSU. The friend left for Australia on Jan. 20 and Momena followed her on Feb. 1. It is not clear if they met while both in Australia. The Counterterrorism and Transnational Crime unit (CTTC) believes it possible that Momena knew other ISIS recruits: "We had detained many radicalized students in 2014. Momena maybe had contact with some of them. We are investigating this matter closely." The police did find large number of WhatsApp and other communications with fellow Islamists, suggesting that Momena was integral to a jihadi network. It is remarkable that these many signs should all have been missed. Second Attack
The injured policeman was taken to the hospital and quickly released. The CTTC subsequently found that, before departing for Melbourne, Momena had ordered her sister to murder a policeman and instructed her on use of a knife. Due to her JMB membership, Asmaul Husna wascharged with terrorism. One would have expected a counterterrorism team to be a little better prepared for trouble from a potential jihadi. Within three days, then, the two sisters, both inspired by Islamic motives, had stabbed two victims in two countries. In the face of Momena's eventual guilty plea, the denial on the part of her family stands out. Her uncle asked, "How can she be involved in militancy after only eight days in Australia? We cannot picture her holding a knife. She is not aggressive or cruel person. No way she can be part of terrorism. We are Muslim, but we are not terrorists or extremists." The uncle recently refused to reply to my question whether, after she pleaded guilty, he still maintains Momena's innocence. Conclusion"How the hell did she get here?" Roger rightly asked of Momena Shoma after the assault. Indeed, her case raises troubling questions about the competence of institutions tasked with keeping the public safe from petite, pretty, graduate student jihadis.
Failure characterized institutions ranging from universities and homestay networks to local and counterterrorism police; worse, my correspondence with the Bangladeshi government suggests it learned nothing from this fiasco. The case of Momena Shoma crystallizes the need for Australia and other Western countries to develop fair but rigorous mechanisms to exclude Islamists from their countries. Note: Islamists, not Muslims. Yes, distinguishing the one from the other is a challenge, but, given adequate time, skill, and funds, it can be done. A number of Australian politicians have endorsed this approach, including Tony Abbott, Bob Carr, Peter Costello, Scott Morrison, Brendan Nelson, and Alby Schultz. Carr was notably specific:
As the petite honor student in linguistics demonstrated, even the most innocuous-looking Muslim can go jihadi to "trigger the West."
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