Findings of interim Bondi report ‘deeply unsettling’: Spender

The trauma of the Bondi massacre still ‘reverberates’ through a Jewish community a day after the release of an interim report on anti-Semitism.

Ria Pandey
NewsWire
An interim report into anti-Semitism has delivered 14 recommendations to the government following the Bondi terror attack.

Independent MP Allegra Spender, whose Wentworth electorate covers Bondi Beach, has described the contents of the interim report by the Royal Commission on anti-Semitism and Social Cohesion as “deeply unsettling” for her Jewish constituents.

Thursday’s report said the US and Israel’s war in Iran was “likely to have increased the risk of attacks directed at the Australian Jewish community”.

Fifteen people died in the alleged Bondi Beach terror attack. Picture: NewsWire / Flavio Brancaleone
Fifteen people died in the alleged Bondi Beach terror attack. NewsWire / Flavio Brancaleone Credit: News Corp Australia

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On Wednesday, Ms Spender told Channel 9 she recently visited a Jewish school in her electorate where it was clear the alleged Bondi terror attack “reverberates every single day with the kids”.

“This is not something that the community is over,” she said.

The report included 14 recommendations but five remained classified. Among the remaining nine recommendations included turning the federal government’s counter-terrorism co-ordinator into a full-time position, prioritising a national gun buyback scheme and nationally consistent gun laws, and reviewing joint counter-terrorism teams.

Ms Spender said the threat to Jewish communities identified by the report was “really stark”.

Allegra Spender’s Wentworth electorate is home to a large Jewish community. Picture: NewsWire / Martin Ollman
Allegra Spender’s Wentworth electorate is home to a large Jewish community. NewsWire / Martin Ollman Credit: News Corp Australia

An example was the anti-Semitic stabbing in the UK this week, she said, where two Jewish men were attacked in north London.

It was subsequently declared a terror incident, with the UK government raising the terrorism threat level to “severe”.

“And you see that with the terrible news that came out of London but also with this continued anti-Semitism that you see in across the country,” Ms Spender said.

She added the questions raised by the royal commission were “absolutely vital”.

“ The community wanted the royal commission. It was something I thought was really important,” Ms Spender said. “And so I think the questions that the royal commission raise is absolutely vital, and this next phase of the (royal commission) hearings is going to be critical to understand what happened and how we can do our best to try and prevent this in the future.”

The report revealed the Jewish Community Security Group (CSG) contacted NSW Police as early as November 28 about safety concerns. It asked for a permanent police presence at the December 14 Chanukah by the Sea event.

CSG classified the threat as “high” and warned that an attack against the Jewish community was “likely”. The request for more NSW Police officers at the event was ultimately not granted.

More to come

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