Australia, Bondi Beach and Hate Speech
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The Prime Minister will not say the words "Islamic extremism", transcripts show, in the face of Labor's opponents lashing the Bondi attack as a result of "radical Islam".
The police found two homemade Islamic State flags in the car of the suspects, a 50-year-old man and his 24-year-old son.
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese says new laws would ease prosecutions for hate speech, raise penalties, and target organisations linked to incitement.
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese will not attend the funeral of Matilda, the youngest victim of the Bondi Beach terror attack.
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese will not attend the funeral of the youngest of the Bondi shooting victims, 10-year-old Matilda, because he wasn’t invited.
Increased penalties for hate speech promoting violence and making hate an aggravating factor in sentencing are among a raft of new laws following the Bondi attack.
A day after the deadliest domestic terror attack in Australia’s history, Prime Minister Anthony Albanese faced criticism he didn’t do enough to combat rising attacks on the Jewish community nor swiftly enact recommendations from the nation’s antisemitism envoy released five months ago.
Anthony Albanese has unveiled a once in a generation overhaul of hate speech laws and immigration powers to eradicate anti-Semitism and shut down hate preachers and extremist groups in the wake of the Bondi Beach massacre.
Less than 48 hours after the deadly attack at Sydney's Bondi Beach that left more than a dozen dead, Australian authorities announced proposals for sweeping new gun laws.
Heroic bystanders were seen on video disarming an ISIS-inspired gunman on a deadly shooting rampage in Sydney, Australia, during a Hanukkah celebration.