BY JAMILA RIZVI
Scared is the wrong word.
I don’t feel scared, more like anxious. It’s that sensation of having eaten a chip and not quite having chewed enough, so it’s grated my throat on the way down.
I go about my day. I forget that uncomfortable feeling for a few minutes or even hours at a time. But then I walk past a television screen, glance at my Facebook feed or hear the murmur of “is this really happening here?” conversations and suddenly – the anxiety returns.
This morning we woke to the news that police raids across Sydney and Brisbane had foiled terrorist plots, one which included executing a random member of the Australian public. A terror cell allegedly planned to abduct an innocent person in Sydney’s Martin Place, drape them in an Islamic State flag and behead them on camera.
Sydney’s Martin Place. Where the alleged beheading was going to take place (via Sydney Council)
Recent widely publicised cases involving the beheading of journalists and aid workers abroad, show that Islamic State appears to favour this highly theatrical brutality. They favour it because this barbaric style of murder captures the attention of those living in democratised nations; in a way that the use of modern weapons does not.