Australia honors Bondi Beach attack victims
Digest more
Australia's prime minister Anthony Albanese was booed as he attended a memorial for victims of the mass shooting, as officials order a national security review.
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, whose government earlier this year recongized a Palestinian state, was booed by the crowd.
Australian hero who tackled Bondi Beach gunman receives $2.6M in donations in response to brave actions during deadly attack that left him wounded but praised globally.
Mourners in Australia have fallen silent in honour of the victims of the Bondi beach attack. The memorial was part of a national day of reflection to mark a week since the shooting in which two gunmen opened fire on an event celebrating the Jewish festival of Hannukah.
Ahmed, who received donations from 43,000 people, was wounded by apparent gunfire from the second perpetrator and is currently in hospital.
Former Hamas hostage Eli Sharabi had warned Australian leaders about rising antisemitism months before the deadly Bondi Beach Hanukkah shooting attack.
Australian and Filipino authorities are investigating a recent trip to the southern Philippines by a father and son accused of gunning down 15 people at Sydney’s Bondi Beach.
When shots ran out at a Hanukkah celebration on Australia's Bondi Beach, Arsen Ostrovsky said he thought it could've been balloons popping.
Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has defied the Jewish community and will not launch a Royal Commission of Inquiry into the senseless Bondi Beach terrorist attacks and will instead mount a more limited investigation.