Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese yesterday said that he has ordered a review into the police and intelligence services after two gunmen shot and killed 15 people at a Jewish festival on Bondi Beach.
A father and his son are accused of spraying bullets into the family-thronged Hanukkah celebration at Sydney’s most famous beach on Sunday last week, allegedly inspired by “Islamic State ideology.”
Albanese said his government would examine whether police and spy services have the powers, structures and sharing arrangements “to keep Australians safe.”
Photo: REUTERS
“The ISIS-inspired atrocity last Sunday reinforces the rapidly changing security environment in our nation,” he said, using an acronym for the Islamic State group. “Our security agencies must be in the best position to respond.”
Alleged gunman Sajid Akram, 50, was shot and killed by police during the Bondi attack. An Indian national, he entered Australia on a visa in 1998.
His 24-year-old son, Naveed, an Australian-born citizen, remains in hospital under police guard and faces multiple charges, including terrorism and 15 murders.
Photo: AP
The son was investigated by the Australian Security Intelligence Organisation in 2019 for possible radicalization, but was found at the time not to pose a threat, according to Australian authorities.
His father was also questioned by the intelligence service as part of that review, but he managed to obtain a gun license that allowed him to own six firearms.
A few weeks before the Bondi Beach attack, the pair returned to Sydney from a four-week trip to the southern Philippines that is now under investigation by detectives there and in Australia.
Albanese said there were “real issues” with Australia’s intelligence service in light of the attack.
“We need to examine exactly the way that systems work. We need to look back at what happened in 2019 when this person was looked at, the assessment that was made,” he told national broadcaster ABC.
Asked in a separate interview about the alleged gunmen’s stay at a hotel in the southern Philippine island of Mindanao, Albanese said their radicalization was under investigation.
“But it is also the case that they were not seen to be persons of interest, and that is why this is such a shocking event,” he said.
There is a long history of Islamist insurgencies in the Mindanao region, but authorities there say there is no evidence to suggest the Philippines is being used to coach extremists.
The staff of Davao City’s GV Hotel have told reporters that the two men stayed holed up in their small room for most of their 28-day stay.
They would usually leave their rooms only for two or three hours, with the longest excursion lasting eight hours, the Philippine national security service said.
Regional police, who have trawled through CCTV images to retrace the pair’s steps and discover who they met, said the father had visited a gun shop.
Clarke Jones, an Australian National University criminologist, said it was “very, very unusual” to have a father and son as suspected perpetrators.
Once in the Philippines, the pair could have easily travelled to Mindanao without raising any flags, he said.
Jones, who has worked with violent offenders in the Philippines, said the alleged gunmen’s radicalization had apparently gone “under the radar” for years after the Australian intelligence probe.
“I think we would really need to look at what happened, and whether that kid, when he was first detected, should have been put through some sort of support program to prevent this potential thing happening,” he said.
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