I have had a quick look around their site and I cannot see where they say they conduct JAA/EASA training. Indians train there and I would ignore their boast about fleet size.
They definitely do Australian stuff but that's no good unless you do all the ground school stuff too. (PPL and CPL).
I would do a lot more research on them too, I have had no dealings with them.
You could of course do an Australian CPL and then convert it in the UK... You'd just have to do the 14 EASA exams, some flying and the IR.
As I posted, I believe there are only 2 JAA accredited schools in Australia. If you don't see the initials JAA or EASA and the word accredited (or similar) then it's not.