Key points
- Neil Prakash faces six terrorism charges and could spend the rest of his life in prison, if found guilty.
- Prakash will face a Melbourne court after being deported from Turkey last week.
- The charges include engaging in hostile activity in a foreign state and advocating terrorism.
Accused Australian jihadi Neil Prakash faces six terrorism charges and could spend the rest of his life in prison, if found guilty.
Prakash, once considered the country's most wanted terrorist, will face a Melbourne court after being deported from Turkey last week.
The charges include engaging in hostile activity in a foreign state, being a member of a terrorist organisation and advocating terrorism.
Engaging in hostile activity in a foreign state, and a separate charge of engaging in hostile activity in a foreign country, each hold a maximum penalty of life imprisonment.
Australian Federal Police assistant commissioner Sandra Booth said the agency had been working "tirelessly" to bring Prakash to justice.
"The AFP and our partners are committed to keeping Australians safe," Assistant Commissioner Booth said.
Prakash, a Melbourne-born ex-rapper, is alleged to have joined and supported the Islamic State from 2014 to 2016.
as part of the extradition arrangements to bring him to Melbourne.
There he appeared by video link from the Palmerston watch house and was handcuffed throughout the hearing. He declined legal representation, remained silent and did not respond to questions as he sat dressed in a white T-shirt.
Neil Prakash arrived back in Australia on Friday after being deported by Turkish authorities. Source: Supplied / Australian Federal Police
In 2016, he was wrongly thought to have been killed in a US military strike in the Iraqi city of Mosul.
However, later the same year Australian officials confirmed he was still alive and had been arrested in Turkey.
Former home affairs minister Peter Dutton revoked Prakash's citizenship in 2018 over his alleged IS participation and on the grounds he was Fijian.
Fijian immigration officials insisted Prakash, born to a Fijian father and a Cambodian mother, had never held nor sought citizenship and refused to take him into the country.