skip to main content

Bondi gunmen driven by 'Islamic State ideology' - Australian PM Albanese

Mourners gather by tributes in memory of the victims of the shooting at Bondi Beach
Mourners gather by tributes in memory of the victims of the shooting at Bondi Beach

A father and son were driven by "Islamic State ideology" when they fired on crowds at Bondi Beach in one of Australia's deadliest mass shootings, Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has said.

Sajid Akram and his son Naveed opened fire on people thronging the famous beach for the Jewish festival of Hanukkah on Sunday evening, killing 15 people and wounding dozens more.

A 10-year-old girl and two Holocaust survivors were among those killed, while 42 others were rushed to hospital with gunshot wounds and other injuries.

Authorities said the attack was designed to sow panic among the nation's Jews, but have so far given little detail about the gunmen's deeper motivations.

Mr Albanese gave one of the first hints that the pair had been radicalised by an "ideology of hate".

"It would appear that this was motivated by Islamic State ideology," Mr Albanese told national broadcaster ABC.

"With the rise of ISIS more than a decade ago now, the world has been grappling with extremism and this hateful ideology," he said in a separate interview, using another name for the Islamic State group.

A Hanukkah menorah is projected onto the sails of the Sydney Opera House
A Hanukkah menorah is projected onto the sails of the Sydney Opera House

The pair travelled to the Philippines before the shootings and authorities are investigating whether they met Islamist extremists during the trip, Australian media reported.

Manila's immigration department confirmed that the pair spent almost all of November in the Philippines, with their final destination listed as Davao.

The province, on the southern island of Mindanao, has a long history of Islamist insurgencies against central government rule.

Immigration records listed Sajid Akram as an Indian national and his son as an Australian citizen, spokeswoman Dana Sandoval said.

Police found a car registered to Naveed Akram parked near the beach in the aftermath of the shooting, in which they found improvised bombs and "two homemade ISIS flags", New South Wales Police Commissioner Mal Lanyon said.


Read more:
Irish woman recalls 'sheer terror' as Bondi shooting unfolded
What we know so far about victims of Bondi Beach attack


Authorities are also facing mounting questions over whether they could have acted earlier to foil the attack.

Albanese said Naveed Akram, reportedly an unemployed bricklayer, had come to the attention of Australia's intelligence agency in 2019 but was not considered an imminent threat at the time.

"They interviewed him, they interviewed his family members, they interviewed people around him," Mr Albanese said.

"He was not seen at that time to be a person of interest."

Police are still piecing together the duo's movements before the shooting.

Naveed Akram reportedly told his mother on the day of the attack that he was heading out of the city on a fishing trip.

Instead, authorities believe that he was holed up in a rental apartment with his father plotting the assault.

Carrying long-barrelled guns, they peppered the beach and a nearby park with bullets for 10 minutes before police shot and killed 50-year-old Sajid Akram.

Naveed Akram, 24, remains in a coma in hospital under police guard.

Tougher gun laws

Australia's leaders agreed yesterday to toughen laws that allowed father Sajid Akram to own six guns.

He received his gun licence in 2023, not 2015 as had been earlier stated, police said. Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke said gun laws introduced by the previous conservative Liberal-National coalition government following the Port Arthur massacre needed to be re-examined.

Former Liberal Prime Minister John Howard, who introduced the gun restrictions in 1996, said he did not want to see gun law reform become a "diversion" from the need to tackle antisemitism.

Mass shootings have been rare in Australia since a lone gunman killed 35 people in the tourist town of Port Arthur in 1996.

The Port Arthur Massacre sparked a world-leading crackdown that included a gun buyback scheme and limits on semi-automatic weapons.

However, many Australians are now questioning whether those laws are equipped to deal with online sales and a steady rise in privately owned guns.

Memorial of flowers

Israeli Ambassador Amir Maimon visited Bondi and urged the Australian government to take all required steps to secure the lives of Jews in Australia.

"Only Australians of Jewish faith are forced to worship their gods behind closed doors, CCTV, guards," Mr Maimon told reporters in Bondi, after laying flowers at the temporary memorial and paying his respects to the victims.

"My heart is torn apart... it is insane."

A string of anti-Semitic incidents in Australia has unfolded in the past 16 months, prompting the head of the nation's main intelligence agency to declare that anti-Semitism was his top priority in terms of threat to life.

"The last four years, I was very clear. And I was very clear about the dangers of the rise in antisemitism," Mr Maimon said.

People lay flowers and hang up Israeli and Australian flags at the Bondi Pavillion.
A makeshift memorial was set up at the Bondi pavilion

At Bondi, the beach was open but was largely empty under overcast skies, as a growing memorial of flowers was established at the Bondi Pavilion, metres from the location of the shootings.

Bondi is Sydney's best-known beach, located about 8.2km from the city centre, and draws hundreds of thousands of international tourists each year.

Desperate to help, Australians have lined up in their thousands to donate blood to the wounded.

Red Cross Australia said more than 7,000 people gave blood on Monday, smashing the previous national record.