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PM has a lob at leadership

December 10, 2024

Tuesday 10 December 2024
Rosie Lewis and Mohammad Alfares
The Australian


 Anthony Albanese and security officials have capitulated to three days of  demands to finally tackle anti-Semitism, setting up a joint  police-intelligence taskforce into hate crimes towards Jewish Australians and  declaring the firebombing of a Melbourne synagogue a likely terrorist attack.
 
 Accused of playing "catch-up", and as Attorney-General Mark Dreyfus  conceded Australia had experienced the highest level of anti-Semitism in a  year in his lifetime, the Prime Minister announced Special Operation Avalite  to investigate threats, violence and hatred towards Australian Jews.
 
 Mr Albanese confirmed he would visit the Adass Israel Synagogue in  Melbourne's Ripponlea this week after federal Labor MP Josh Burns, who  represents the suburb and is Jewish, was booed by the community at the centre  of the suspected terror attack, and as images emerged of the Prime Minister  playing tennis in Perth's wealthy beachside suburb of Cottesloe on Saturday  afternoon.
 
 With the AFP taskforce to be assisted by ASIO and working with state and  territory police, Mr Albanese said anti-Semitism was a "major  threat" and on the rise but did not say it was a bigger threat than  Islamophobia.
 
 Australia's terrorism threat level remains at "probable", with ASIO  head Mike Burgess repeating his warning for people to be careful with their  language so as not to inflame tensions and incite violence.
 
 "We have seen incidents such as this (synagogue fire) ... targeted  specifically at the Jewish community," the Prime Minister said.
 
 "The Melbourne attack will be investigated as a terrorist incident.
 
 Our world-class agencies will provide all the support necessary to find the  perpetrators and ensure they face the full force of the law.
 
 "I can also announce that we have established AFP Special Operation  Avalite for anti-Semitism.
 
 This is in response to the attack last Friday morning that is now the third  arson attack after the attack on Josh Burns's electorate office (in June) and  the Sydney Woollahra car incident (last month)."
 
 As recently as Sunday the Prime Minister dismissed calls from former deputy  Liberal leader and prominent Jewish Australian Josh Frydenberg for a police  taskforce devoted to stamping out anti-Semitism, and took more than 48 hours  to say he personally believed the synagogue fire was a terrorist attack.
 
 Mr Albanese did not change his busy three-day schedule in Perth and held a  cabinet national security committee meeting on Monday as planned, rather than  have one remotely. "This (arson attack) happened very early Friday  morning. By the time I had taken off from Sydney, I'd had a full briefing  from the AFP Commissioner. I'd spoken to the president of the (Jewish)  community, I'd spoken to the special envoy for anti-Semitism, Jillian Segal,  and I was fully engaged," he said. "I rang into an interview on  Raff Epstein's program in Melbourne. I'd spoken to Josh Burns and ... to a  number of other members of the Jewish community. I will visit there."
 
 Victoria Police Chief Commissioner Shane Patton on Monday revealed three  arsonists were believed to be involved in the attack, which gutted one of  Australia's busiest synagogues.
 
 "We have had a terrorist attack on that synagogue," Mr Patton said.  "What concerns me is the callous nature of this attack, the involved  nature of this attack, and Continued on Page 5
 
 Albanese has a lob at national leadership Continued from Page 1 the fact that  the attack has taken place where it occurred. It's quite clear it was  targeted. It was callous and an horrific attack on the synagogue but, by  default, it's an attack on the Jewish people."
 
 Mr Patton would not be drawn on the three suspects' identities but he said  they were considered flight risks. He would not confirm if the arsonists were  known to police or whether they were carrying guns during the incident.
 
 Foreign interference playing a part in the arson has not been ruled out.
 
 Opposition home affairs spokesman James Paterson accused the Prime Minister  of "copying" the Coalition, after he and Peter Dutton earlier on  Monday announced a suite of measures to tackle anti-Semitism, including a  dedicated taskforce led by the AFP and incorporating ASIO and others.
 
 The Coalition would direct the taskforce to refer any visa holders involved  in acts of anti-Semitism to be deported, address outstanding complaints and  unsolved crimes against the Jewish community since October 7, 2023 and amend  the so-called character test to ensure anti-Semitic conduct was captured by  the law.
 
 "It's very obvious the Prime Minister is playing catch-up and copying  the opposition's homework, but it's also clear his heart isn't in it. If it  was, he would have launched this taskforce in the immediate aftermath of  October 7, when it first became apparent we had a serious anti-Semitism  crisis," Senator Paterson said.
 
 "Labor's failure to recognise this as the serious threat to our national  security and community safety has directly contributed to the tragic events  at Adass Israel synagogue." Commissioner Reece Kershaw said the AFP had  been discussing for months how to better support state and territory police  to investigate hate crimes and threats against vulnerable communities, and  would take a "greater role" in protecting Jewish people.
 
 "Unfortunately in Australia today, those of Jewish ethnicity or religion  are being targeted because of who they are ... This is a crime, this needs to  stop and today the AFP will expand its remit with the support of the  commonwealth government," Mr Kershaw said.
 
 "Special Operation Avalite will be an agile and experienced squad of  counter-terrorism investigators who will focus on threats of violence and  hatred towards the Australian Jewish community and parliamentarians. In  essence, they will be a flying squad to deploy nationally to incidents.
 
 "(It) will investigate ... urging violence against members or groups,  advocating terrorism, advocating genocide, using a carriage service to make a  threat and using a carriage service to menace or harass."
 
 Mr Dutton was escorted inside the Adass Israel Synagogue on Monday, labelling  the attack an "abomination" and "evil".
 
 "How do you explain to a seven- or eight-year-old Jewish child that the  place of worship is attacked in this way?" he said.
 
 "How do you explain to them that there are armed guards at their school  protecting them from a similar attack? "I think we all need to come  together, make sure we can call out evil when we see it. And this really is  evil. To see the half-burnt books and the scriptures, and the devastation to  a place that otherwise is peaceful and allows people to practise their faith,  to share each other's company, to see it disrupted in that way is a horrible  thing."

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