Career
While his exact place of birth is unknown, sources give his birthplace as either Afghanistan, India or Pakistan. He was one of the perpetrators of the Battle of Broken Hill, a mass shooting which left six dead and seven injured. Mullah Abdullah arrived in South Australia circa 1890, primarily in search for a job.
He found one as a cameleer in 1899, Broken Hill, New South Wales.
There, he also served as an imam to "Afghan" immigrants at their "Ghantown", leading daily prayers, and was the spiritual head of the group of cameleers. This caused Abdullah to bear great ill-feeling towards the Union, as well as the local sanitary inspector, Brosnan, who prosecuted him.
Another camel-driver and Abdullah"s next-door neighbour, Gool Badsha Mahomed, was an Afridi tribesman from Afghanistan, and had fought in the Turkish Army. After the start of World War I, his religious and nationalistic fervour increased as he became infuriated by the conflict.
Mullah Abdullah and Gool formed an alliance and plotted a mass shooting, to take place on 1 January 1915.
Following a long exchange of fire, local police officers shot Abdullah dead. Gool died of gunshot wounds in hospital. The total death toll among the train passengers was four, with seven others severely wounded.
Abdullah and Gool were buried secretly at a public building later that day by a police-employed Aborigine.