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Austria convicts 14-year-old on 'terror' charges

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AFP Sankt-Poelten (Austria)
A 14-year-old Austrian schoolboy was convicted today of planning to bomb a Vienna train station in the name of the Islamic State group and sentenced to eight months behind bars.

The teenager of Turkish origin was found guilty of belonging to a "terrorist" organisation and given an additional suspended jail sentence of 16 months by a court in his hometown of Sankt-Poelten.

According to the charge sheet, the teenager, who emigrated from Turkey in 2007, wanted to carry out the attack before travelling to join "holy war" in Syria alongside the Islamic State (IS) group.

Police had said at the time of his arrest in October 2014 that the boy made "concrete enquiries about buying ingredients" for a bomb and "planned to explode the devices in public places, such as the Vienna Westbahnhof," a major train station.
 

His lawyer Rudolf Mayer said his client - who he said grew up "without a father" and who turns 15 in the coming days - had only been "playing with the idea" of making a bomb.

Placed in a special school for troubled children where "prospects for professional development are almost inexistent", the boy had "looked for recognition, to belong to something," Mayer told the court.

"Imagine the power of propaganda that says to young people who feel they are living an empty existence: 'You can do something good, and get money and women'," he said.

It was his own family who alerted authorities to his growing radicalisation.

Police found violent images and IS propaganda on the teen's computer, mobile phone and games console. The public prosecutor told the court that the defendant expressed "no feelings of guilt".

The baby-faced teenager appeared in court in a grey hooded top. He listened in silence to opening comments from the prosecution and his attorney before media were ejected.

The authorities asked the media not to name the boy because of his age.

He has been in custody since January after breaking the terms of his bail. Because of his young age he had faced up to five years behind bars.

In common with other European countries, Austria has seen a steady flow of people leaving or attempting to leave the country in order to join IS.

According to the Austrian interior ministry, more than 200 have done so, including some women and minors.

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First Published: May 26 2015 | 8:22 PM IST

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