Austria refuses to treat suspected Isis fighter in a coma
Austria’s new interior ministry on Wednesday refused to allow a suspected Islamic State group fighter to travel from Georgia to Vienna for emergency surgery, saying it would pose a “major” security risk.
Austrian President Alexander Van der Bellen (R) hands over the letter of appointment to Interior Minister Herbert Kickl during the inauguration ceremony of the new government in December. Photo: AFP
Temirlan M, 19, is in a coma after being shot in the head during a special forces operation in northern Georgia on December 26th, the Kronen Zeitung newspaper reported.
He is believed to be linked to Chechen warlord Akhmed Chatayev, who is suspected of organising a 2016 attack at Istanbul’s airport.
Georgian authorities asked that the man receive emergency surgery in a Viennese hospital but a spokesman for Austria’s interior ministry said the government had vetoed his entrance to the country.
The arrival of Temirlan M would pose a “major risk to domestic security,” the spokesman said, adding that possible rescue or blackmail attempts could be made if the man entered the country.
A country of 8.7 million people with a large Chechen community, Austria has one of Europe’s highest numbers of foreign jihadists per capita.
Chatayev was killed during a counter-terror operation in Georgia’s capital Tbilisi in November.
He had been identified by Turkish media as the organiser of a triple suicide bombing at Istanbul’s main airport in June 2016 in which 46 people were killed and more than 200 wounded.
Austria’s new government, a coalition between the conservative People’s Party (ÖVP) and the far-right FPÖ entered office in mid-December, pledging to stop illegal immigration and to make national security a priority.
The FPÖ party runs the interior ministry.
Source:thelocal.at