Australia remains on edge more than a week after the Bondi Beach terror attack that claimed 15 lives and injured dozens during a Hanukkah celebration, as political tensions sharpen and governments move to overhaul hate speech and firearms laws.
In New South Wales, state parliament is expected to continue debating urgently drafted hate speech and gun reform legislation today, following the recall of MPs earlier this week. The proposed laws were introduced amid mounting public pressure for tougher restrictions, as polling shows overwhelming support for stronger gun controls across the country.
At the federal level, the Albanese government has resisted renewed calls for a national royal commission into the attack, instead announcing a fast-tracked review of national security and policing agencies, to be led by former intelligence chief Dennis Richardson.
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said the review would allow for quicker action, while signalling Commonwealth cooperation with a state-level royal commission proposed by the NSW government.
Twelve victims of the attack remain in hospital, including four in critical but stable condition. The sole surviving accused gunman, 24-year-old Naveed Akram, was transferred from hospital to a Sydney correctional facility on Monday after spending nearly a week under police guard. His matter is due to return to court in February.
Newly released court documents allege that Akram and his father, Sajid Akram — who was shot dead by police at the scene — spent months planning the attack, including firearms training in regional New South Wales and travel to the Philippines weeks beforehand.
Investigators allege the pair stockpiled weapons, improvised explosive devices and Islamic State flags before launching the assault on December 14.
The political fallout has intensified in Canberra, with Opposition Leader Sussan Ley renewing calls for a national royal commission and escalating her criticism of the government’s response. Ley has doubled down on a personal attack on Foreign Minister Penny Wong, accusing her of being absent in the aftermath of the attack — remarks that senior ministers have condemned as inflammatory and divisive.
Climate Change and Energy Minister Chris Bowen described the comments as “disgusting” and part of an “increasingly partisan pile-on”, while Wong urged political leaders to lower tensions and maintain unity during a period of national grief.
As investigations continue and legislative responses unfold, community leaders and authorities have repeatedly urged restraint, unity and responsible public discourse, warning against politicisation as Australia continues to mourn one of the deadliest terror attacks in its history.
Source: ABC News