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CHILDCARE ATTACK: ALBO FINALLY ACTS ON HATE CRIME

January 21, 2025

Tuesday 21 January 2025
Ellen Ransley and Nicola Smith
The Nightly


 The PM has called an urgent National Cabinet meeting on the growing  anti-Semitism crisis in Australia after Sydney daycare centre targeted Prime  Minister Anthony Albanese has caved to pressure and convened an urgent  National Cabinet meeting to tackle the escalating anti-Semitism crisis, after  a Sydney childcare centre was vandalised and set alight.
 
 Following weeks of resisting calls from the Coalition, the peak Jewish body,  and his own hand-picked anti-Semitism envoy while saying people don't want  "more meetings, they want to see more action" Mr Albanese met with  State and Territory leaders on Tuesday evening.
 
 The first ministers announced they would establish a national database to  "track anti-Semitic crime and other incidents and behaviours",  stating the purpose would be to "better inform and coordinate responses  to anti-Semitic incidents".
 
 It falls short of pleas from the PM's hand-picked anti-Semitism envoy Jillian  Segal, who called for a National Cabinet meeting to coordinate a nationwide  crackdown of bail and sentencing laws for hate crimes and on Tuesday said she  wanted "any outcome that leads to meaningful legal reform".
 
 Mr Albanese had called the meting after visiting the Only About Childcare  centre in Maroubra, which was graffitied with "f... the Jews" and  set on fire shortly before 1am on Tuesday, an act the PM denounced as a  "horrific attack beyond belief".
 
 NSW Premier Chris Minns described the attack on the childcare centre as  "completely disgusting" as he visited Maroubra with the Prime Minister.  "These bastards will be rounded up by New South Wales Police," he  warned.
 
 The childcare attack marked the latest in a series of hate crimes against  Jewish people this summer, including the terror attack on a Melbourne  synagogue, attempted arson at another Sydney synagogue, the firebombing and  vandalising of the former home of a prominent Jewish community leader, and a  spate of other incidents.
 
 AFP commissioner Reece Kershaw who briefed national cabinet said in a  statement that police were probing whether "overseas actors or  individuals have paid local criminals in Australia" in cryptocurrency to  carry out some of the attacks.
 
 Police are also looking into whether young people had been carrying out any  of the attacks, and if they had been radicalised online. He called for public  calm as police work to charge the people "demonising and  intimidating" the Jewish community.
 
 He said arrests had been made under Special Operation Avalite to target  high-harm anti-Semitism and Operation Ardvarna to target the display of  prohibited symbols and that "more are expected soon".
 
 The targeting of a childcare facility has appalled the nation and an already  besieged Jewish community and spurred calls for a tougher response.
 
 NSW Premier Chris Minns described the attack on the childcare centre as  "completely disgusting" as he visited Maroubra with the Prime  Minister. "These bastards will be rounded up by New South Wales  Police," he warned.
 
 Last month, the Executive Council of Australian Jewry wrote to Mr Albanese  asking for an urgent meeting of National C after the terror attack on the  Adass Israel Synagogue in  Melbourne.  After his former home was firebombed and vandalised on Friday, ECAJ co-chief  Alex Ryvchin warned the scourge of anti-Semitism would result in death if the  PM didn't take strong leadership.
 
 The group welcomed news the meeting would finally take place, but lamented it  had come in the wake of the childcare centre attack.
 
 Opposition Leader Peter Dutton, who also made the request in a letter to the  Prime Minister in November, stressed Tuesday's meeting must produce  "tangible outcomes" to deter illegal and racist behaviour against  people of Jewish faith who were "living in fear".
 
 "We are having rolling terrorist attacks in our community, and the Prime  Minister is being dragged kicking and screaming to hold a meeting of our  nation's leaders," he told a rally of the Liberal Party faithful in the  suburbs of northern Sydney.
 
 Mr Albanese stopped short of labelling the Maroubra attack "domestic  terrorism", deferring to the police to make that call.
 
 "There is no question that what this is aimed at is creating fear in the  community," he said.
 
 Shadow home affairs minister James Paterson said Mr Albanese had been forced  to convene a National Cabinet only after 15 months when it "got  completely out of control".
 
 "Now that the Prime Minister has finally stopped dragging his feet and  called a National Cabinet he must use the opportunity to drive co-ordinated  national action to fix this domestic terrorism crisis targeting Jewish  Australians," he told The Nightly.
 
 "Right now, the perpetrators of these acts of terror do not fear the  consequences of their behaviour because Federal and State governments have  been too slow and too weak.
 
 "The best time for strong leadership was 15 months ago but the second  best time is now.
 
 I hope the Prime Minister doesn't fail this test of leadership again."
 
 Mr Albanese had earlier left the door open to leading a co-ordinated legal  crackdown.
 
 "The law isn't something that's stagnant," Mr Albanese told 7NEWS.  "It's something that must be consistently monitored to make sure that  community standards are kept up. We will take advice this afternoon."
 
 On Monday, the Coalition said it would introduce minimum jail terms for acts  of anti-Semitism if elected.
 
 It pledged to introduce mandatory minimum sentencing of six years in jail for  all acts of terrorism, as well as new provisions to make hate crimes urging  or threatening violence towards a place of worship punishable by five to  seven years. The plan would also result in a minimum 12-month sentence, up to  five years, for the public display of prohibited nazi symbols, prohibited  terrorist organisation symbols, and giving the nazi salute in public.
 
 The Federal Government outlawed the nazi salute and hate symbols at the end  of last year.
 
 On Tuesday, shadow attorney-general Michaelia Cash said the PM should  "immediately commit" to these measures and "tell Jewish  Australians what his government and the State governments will do to protect  them from future attacks."
 
 She said a National Cabinet should have been convened last year and taken steps  to address the worsening crisis.
 
 "It is the ultimate in weakness to let a crisis run out of control for  months before acting," she said.
 
 State political leaders refused to be drawn ahead of the Cabinet meeting over  what further measures could be enforced to curb the rise of anti-Semitism.
 
 Queensland Premier David Crisafulli pledged a tough State crackdown to fight  behaviour that was ripping down Australia's moral fabric.
 
 "My message to National Cabinet is we must deal with it in the strongest  possible terms and if that body doesn't, well, then Queensland will," he  said.
 
 Mr Minns reiterated on Tuesday he was prepared to strengthen hate speech  laws, in addition to banning protests outside places of worship.
 
 "If I need to strengthen the law in New South Wales, that's exactly what  I'll do," he said.
 
 NSW Police Force Commissioner Karen Webb on Tuesday afternoon announced a  further 20 investigators would be added to Strike Force Pearl, the State  taskforce to counter anti-Semitism, doubling its capacity.
 
 "This boost in resources allocated to Strike Force Pearl reflects the  seriousness of these crimes and the importance of putting those responsible  before the courts as soon as possible. These acts are despicable and have no  place in our society," she said.
 
 Dr Dvir Abramovich, chairman of the Anti-Defamation Commission, described the  move to hold a National Cabinet as "survival" rather than progress.
 
 "Australia is on the brink of a moral reckoning, and the gathering of  State and Territory leaders is not just overdue it's an act of national  triage to stop the bleeding before it's too late," he said.
 
 He warned the Cabinet could not just be "another talkfest", but  must be the start of an "uncompromising, unified offensive" against  forces of hate that included nationwide legal reforms to make anti-Semitic  crimes punishable by the harshest penalties.
 
 The agenda must include "zero-tolerance enforcement that removes  ambiguity, and a commitment to education so unyielding that no Australian  grows up ignorant of the Holocaust or blind to the dangers of  prejudice", he said.
 
 Elsewhere, the Prime Minister said the Federal and NSW governments would  finance the repair costs for the childcare centre and cover childcare  payments while it was unusable.
 
 Education Minister Jason Clare declared a childcare subsidy "period of  emergency", meaning the centre will continue to receive Commonwealth  funding while it is out of operation to ensure workers keep getting paid.
 
 It will also wave the gap fee for many families.
 
 "Both of those measures will be placed for as long as it takes," he  said.
 
 "What sort of a scumbag would attack a childcare centre? You've really  got to ask yourself that question," he said.

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