Terror is normally a misnomer for mass murder. When bombs or bullets shatter the peace of civilian life, many people are not normally terrorised, as such, even in the city where it occurred. Most citizens go about their lives the next day sensibly, realising the risk is very low. Real
Editorial: Warnings on terrorism not issued lightly
Subscribe to listen
A Belgian Army soldier patrols on a main boulevard in Brussels. Photo / AP
In fact no government issues these sorts of warnings without reluctance, for every time one does so it does the terrorists' work for them. The fact will not have gone unnoticed in militant circles that a credible threat is more terrifying than an occasional act of so-called terror.
Governments will also be aware that each time public fears are heightened, the political climate becomes more difficult for some immigrant communities. In Australia, three-quarters of the population believes a large-scale terrorist attack is likely within the country and a quarter believe one is imminent, according to a poll at the weekend. In Sydney's Martin Place, where an Isis imitator died with hostages in a cafeteria last December, rival demonstrations for and against population diversity had to be separated by police on Sunday.
New Zealand is not immune to these fears and tensions, or indeed the threat that causes them. But so far, our Government has not seen fit to raise the level of alarm. The Prime Minister says one or two of about 40 people under watch are under fulltime surveillance. No country should have cause for terror if its security services are doing their job.