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AAP
AAP
National
Andrew Brown

Inquiry into caravan briefings a waste of resources: PM

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese says the Opposition is attempting to politicise police processes. (Scott Radford-Chisholm/AAP PHOTOS)

Anthony Albanese has dismissed coalition calls for a public inquiry to be held into when he was briefed on an alleged anti-Semitic plot involving a caravan filled with explosives.

Opposition Leader Peter Dutton on Thursday urged a public probe into when the prime minister was informed about the caravan in north-west Sydney, which contained a list of Jewish targets and explosives.

While NSW Premier Chris Minns said he was told of the caravan plot several days before it was made public in late January, the prime minister has not stated when he was informed, following a breakdown of communication between state and federal authorities.

"There is no way in the world that a prime minister would be kept in the dark for 10 days about an alleged terrorist plot that could have killed hundreds of Australians. Why was the premier of New South Wales notified about it?" Mr Dutton told reporters in Canberra.

"If there was a national security imperative to keep it from political leaders, it just doesn't add up."

The opposition has been using the first week back for federal parliament for the year to question the prime minister on when security agencies briefed him on the caravan plot.

Mr Dutton rejected suggestions an inquiry would divert police resources from active investigations.

General view where a caravan containing explosives was found in Dural
Federal police are set to be questioned on what briefings they gave about the caravan discovery. (Bianca De Marchi/AAP PHOTOS)

But Mr Albanese said an inquiry was not needed and that he was briefed regularly on security issues.

"Peter Dutton wants resources of the Australian Federal Police and the intelligence agencies to stop doing what they're doing, chasing down these criminals, arresting them, putting them in the clink. Instead, he wants a political process," he told reporters in Queensland.

"It's extraordinary that Peter Dutton thinks this is the way to go. But for Peter Dutton, there is no issue too big for him to show how small his approach to politics is."

The opposition leader said the prime minister had been changing his position repeatedly on when he was informed about the caravan's discovery.

"It's obvious that the prime minister wasn't notified, and the question is, why? I don't think that distracts hours of human resource away," he said.

"It's obvious that the prime minister was kept in the dark."

Mr Albanese said authorities had made arrests as part of their investigations into the plot and police processes needed to be respected.

"You don't have to be someone who watches CSI every week to know that that is the important process, not these political games."

"What I will do is to back intelligence agencies, what I will do is to not reveal information that is sensitive for things that are ongoing investigations."

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