Posted: 2023-02-13 03:50:51

The head of Australia's domestic spy agency says the threat of a terrorist attack by nationalist extremists or conspiracy theorists has receded since governments abandoned lockdowns and other strict COVID-19 control measures. 

Last year the Australian Security Intelligence Organisation (ASIO) dropped the terrorism threat level from "probable" to "possible", with the agency instead ploughing additional resources into growing threats posed by espionage and foreign interference. 

The head of ASIO, Mike Burgess, told a Senate estimates hearing this morning that some of the uncertainties created by the COVID-19 pandemic — which in turn fuelled anti-government conspiracy theories against lockdowns and vaccination campaigns — had eased over time. 

"The volatility has reduced somewhat, in particular around the COVID [measures], so there's less angst these days. We're not subject to mandates," he said. 

"Some of that feeling does live on, but the number of cases we've been looking at, they've reduced significantly."

Mr Burgess previously created headlines when he sounded the alarm over the growing terrorist threat posed by far-right racist and nationalist groups. 

He also warned those extremist groups were trying to swell their ranks by recruiting people potentially radicalised by COVID-19 conspiracy theories. 

Today he told senators that at its peak, right-wing extremism accounted for about half of ASIO's counter-terrorism workload — but that figure had now dropped considerably. 

"It did get to 50/50 … but has actually since moderated, so now we're in the territory of 70/30," he said. 

"So 70 per cent [are] religiously motivated, and 30 per cent [are] ideologically motivated. 

"Most of that is nationalist and racist, violent extremism." 

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