❓WHAT HAPPENED: A father and son who launched a deadly attack at Australia’s Bondi Beach during a Hanukkah celebration, killing at least 15 people, reportedly pledged loyalty to Islamic State (ISIS).
👤WHO WAS INVOLVED: Reports indicate that Naveed Akram, 24, and his father, Sajid Akram, 50, were the attackers.
📍WHEN & WHERE: The attack occurred on Sunday evening at Bondi Beach, Sydney.
💬KEY QUOTE: “The targeted attack on Jewish Australians on the first day of Hanukkah, which should be a day of joy … [was] an act of evil anti-Semitism.” – Prime Minister Anthony Albanese
🎯IMPACT: The incident is Australia’s worst mass shooting in three decades, sparking investigations into the attackers’ motives and backgrounds.
The father-and-son attackers who executed a deadly mass shooting at a Hanukkah celebration on Australia’s Bondi Beach on Sunday reportedly pledged allegiance to the Islamic State (ISIS). Flags for the jihadist group were discovered in their vehicle.
Pakistani immigrant Sajid Akram, 50, and his son Naveed Akram, 24, armed with rifles, killed at least 15 people—including a 10-year-old girl, a Holocaust survivor, and a London-born rabbi. Police fatally shot Sajid Akram during the incident, while Naveed Akram was critically wounded and is now under guard in a Sydney hospital.
Just weeks earlier, the pair had traveled back to Australia after a trip to Mindanao Island in the Philippines. New South Wales Police, the Australian Federal Police, and the Australian Security Intelligence Organisation are examining their activities on the island, which has long been regarded as an extremist hotspot. An Australian journalist was shot there in 2019 while reporting on battles against ISIS affiliates.
“There’s areas down there that are very dangerous… [with] training camps and the like,” a senior police source told the media on Monday. “It has become a well-trodden path for Islamic State through South East Asia and into the Philippines ever since 2019.”
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has called the Bondi Beach shooting an “act of evil anti-Semitism.” The Australian authorities have called for public calm and no retaliatory actions.
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