Arrests made after murder of basketball-loving boys

Callum Godde |

Seven people have been arrested after two boys, aged 12 and 15, were fatally stabbed.
Seven people have been arrested after two boys, aged 12 and 15, were fatally stabbed.

Dawn raids have led to the arrest of seven young men and teenagers over the high-profile stabbing deaths of two children.

Chol Achiek, 12, and Dau Akeng, 15, died after being attacked while walking home at Cobblebank in Melbourne’s outer northwest on September 6.

The pair were ambushed by masked males armed with machetes and other bladed weapons.

The scene of a fatal stabbing in Cobblebank
The boys died on a street in Cobblebank, on their way home from a basketball game. (David Crosling/AAP PHOTOS)

Another boy walking with the victims, after the group watched a basketball game together, managed to escape the suspected gang members.

Police raided properties in Melton South, Thornhill Park, Caroline Springs, Sunbury, Wollert, Hillside and Sydenham on Thursday morning, arresting seven males.

A 19-year-old Thornhill Park man, a 19-year-old Caroline Springs man and an 18-year-old Wollert man were among those arrested.

Three 16-year-old boys and a 15-year-old boy, all from the north western suburbs of Melbourne, were also arrested.

All seven will be interviewed by Victoria Police detectives.

Assistant Commissioner Martin O’Brien said the arrests followed almost two weeks of diligent and thorough police work.

“The word senseless has been used so many times already in relation to the deaths of Dau Akueng and Chol Achiek, because the reality is that it doesn’t make sense,” he said.

The scene at one of the fatal stabbings in Cobblebank
Melbourne’s Sudanese community was devastated by the murders. (Joel Carrett/AAP PHOTOS)

“Two children walking home after playing sport, who should have had decades of their lives ahead of them.

“Instead, their devastated families are grieving their loss and all the things they will never get to see two children grow up to achieve and experience.”

The impact of the deaths of the boys have been felt right across the Victorian community, police said.

“I know many people will be feeling shocked, frustrated and concerned in light of this matter,” Mr O’Brien said.

“I want to reassure you that locally, police will have increased patrols in the area and are working closely with community groups.”

The Victorian government reconvened a South Sudanese Australian youth justice expert working group in response to the deaths.

AAP