Alleged Islamic State recruiter extradited to Australia

Neil Christopher Prakash, 31, was arrested in Turkey in 2016 after crossing into the country from Syria.
A boy plays with a broken sword, at al-Hol camp, which houses families of members of the Islamic State group, in Hasakeh province, Syria, May 1, 2021.  (Photo: AP/Baderkhan Ahmad)
A boy plays with a broken sword, at al-Hol camp, which houses families of members of the Islamic State group, in Hasakeh province, Syria, May 1, 2021. (Photo: AP/Baderkhan Ahmad)

An Islamic State fighter who featured heavily in the jihadist group's recruiting propaganda will be charged with "serious terror offences" after being extradited to Australia from Turkey, federal police said Friday.

Neil Christopher Prakash, 31, was arrested in Turkey in 2016 after crossing into the country from Syria.

Prakash was sentenced in 2019 to seven years imprisonment by a Turkish court, which found him guilty of belonging to a terrorist organisation. 

Australian Federal Police said Prakash arrived in Australia by plane on Friday morning.  

"An investigation started in 2016 when the man was alleged to have travelled to Syria to fight with Islamic State," it said in a statement. 

"The AFP will allege in court that the man committed a range of serious terrorism offences." 

Authorities have estimated some 230 Australians travelled to Iraq and Syria to take up arms since 2012 -- Prakash being one of the most prominent examples.

He featured in IS recruiting videos in which he urged Australians to "wake up" and join the group.

Prakash was described by former conservative prime minister Malcolm Turnbull as one of the "key financiers or organisers" for Islamic State in the Middle East. 

Former Australian attorney-general George Brandis in 2016 said Prakash had been killed in Iraq following a targeted US air strike. 

It was later confirmed that he was wounded but not killed in the blast.