पूर्ण संस्करण देखें
⚡ AMP पेज | पूर्ण वेबसाइट देखें
Death

Bombshell royal commission call after Bondi

✍️ Admin 📅 08 January, 2026 ⏰ 06:40 AM 👁 52 views

The Prime Minister finalised plans for a royal commission led by respected judge Virginia Bell, defying Jewish criticism of her appointment, with the federal cabinet signing off on the multi-million dollar probe this afternoon after weeks of pressure.

“I’ve repeatedly said that our government’s priority is to promote unity and social cohesion, and this is what Australia needs to heal, to learn, to come together in a spirit of national unity and to go forward knowing that just like people who gathered that night on Bondi Beach

were committing to that light will prevail over darkness,” the prime minister said during a press conference on Thursday afternoon.

“It’s clear to me that a royal commission is essential to achieving this, and I’ve spoken with Premier Minns, and I would expect that a single royal commission will be had.

“Today I announce that I will be recommending to the Governor-General in an Executive Council meeting that will be held tomorrow that a royal commission on anti-Semitism and Social Cohesion be established.

“I have asked that former High Court Justice the Honourable Virginia Bell AC, serve as the Commissioner.”

“Dennis Richardson’s work will become part of the Commission, and he will support its work with the delivery of an interim report by the Commission in April.”

Federal cabinet signed off on the multi-million dollar probe this afternoon after weeks of pressure and a string of senior ministers arguing against the inquiry on the grounds that it could platform anti-semitism.

“I’ve listened, and in a democracy, that’s a good thing to listen to what people are saying,” Mr Albanese said of the backflip.

“And what people are saying is, yes, we’re concerned about the events, and the Richardson review will give consideration to those national security issues, where there any gaps or anything else, but we want an opportunity to tell our story about what occurred.”

“I’ve taken the time to reflect, to meet with leaders in the Jewish community, and most importantly, I’ve met with many of the families of victims and survivors of that horrific attack,”

The Prime Minister downplayed concerns a royal commission would potentially prejudice the criminal trial of Bondi gunman Naveed Akram.

“It’s one of the reasons why we chose someone who has a criminal law background, has been in senior positions in the Supreme Court and the High Court of Australia. That is, she’s the most qualified person we could possibly consider,” he said.

The Royal Commission will cover four key areas including.

- tackling antisemitism by investigating the nature and prevalence of antisemitism in institutions and society, and its key drivers in Australia, including ideologically and religiously motivated extremism and radicalisation

- making recommendations that will assist law enforcement, border control, immigration, and security agencies to tackle antisemitism,

- examining the circumstances surrounding the antisemitic Bondi terrorist attack on 14 December 2025

- making any other recommendations arising out of the inquiry for strengthening social cohesion in Australia and countering the spread of ideologically and religiously motivated extremism.

“A Royal Commission is not the beginning or the end of what Australia must do to eradicate antisemitism, protect ourselves from terrorism or strengthen our social cohesion,’’ Mr Albanese said.

“That is an ongoing national effort, for all of us. Because an attack on Jewish Australians is an attack on all Australians.”

Responding to the announcement, the president of the Executive Council of Australian Jewry (ECAJ), Daniel Aghion KC, welcomed the decision.

“We are especially grateful to the eminent artists, lawyers, business leaders, sporting legends, political figures, women’s organisations and other groups who added their powerful voices to this call,’’ he said.

“(We) expect that the terms of reference of the Royal Commission will allow an honest examination of government policies and the conduct and policies of key

institutions and figures in major sectors of our society in contributing or failing to adequately respond to the unprecedented levels of antisemitism in Australia over the past two years or more. This is the only way that Australia’s time-honoured standards of

decency and fairness can be upheld.”

The backflip on a royal commission came after nearly 100 Labor members - including former MPs, party officials, trade union leaders and councillors urged the PM to act on anti-semitism.

“This is the right moment for serious and considered national introspection about a sore that has been allowed to fester for too long,” Jewish Labor convenor Michael Borowick told news.com.au

“This issue will not be resolved by hiding behind internal government reviews, or gun law reform. Only an inquiry into the root causes of antisemitism will suffice.

“We are loyal and dedicated Labor members who want this government to succeed.

“Sometimes it is your friends who are the best placed to tell you when you need to change tack.”

‘Unthinkable’: Fury over Albo’s divisive pick

Earlier today, Former Treasurer Josh Frydenberg has slammed the appointment of former High Court judge Virginia Bell to lead a royal commission into anti-semitism.

Members of the Jewish community have pushed back, insisting former Federal Court chief justice James Allsop or current Federal Court judge Michael Lee are better choices.

“The Prime Minister has been told directly by leaders of the Jewish community that they have serious concerns about this appointment,” Mr Frydenberg said in a post on X.

“After more than two years of unprecedented hate, harassment and violence directed towards the Jewish community, culminating in Australia’s deadliest terrorist attack at Bondi Beach it is unthinkable the Prime Minister would choose a Commissioner that did not have the total confidence of the Jewish community.

“This is a time for unity and national healing.

“This is a time to turn back the tide of hate and antisemitism that has destroyed so many lives.

“Prime Minister, I appeal to you, this is the time to do the right thing and call a Commonwealth Royal Commission with the appointment of the right Commissioner whose leadership will provide the answers and solutions our country so urgently needs.”

Virginia Bell, a highly respected former judge, is the Prime Minister’s pick to lead the royal commission.

But Sky News reports The PM is also weighing up appointing Justice Allsop amid mounting backlash from the Jewish community.

Justice Lee presided over the defamation trial instigated by Bruce Lehrmann, which found on the balance of probabilities that the Liberal staffer raped Brittany Higgins.

Ms Bell also previously led an inquiry into former prime minister Scott Morrison’s multiple ministry scandal.

She served as a Judge of the High Court of Australia from 2009 to 2021, after serving as a Judge of the Supreme Court of NSW for almost a decade.

Backflip after weeks of political pressure

News.com.au revealed on Wednesday Anthony Albanese was in talks with the NSW Premier Chris Minns to expand the proposed NSW royal commission into a combined state-commonwealth probe, bowing to weeks of political pressure.

In a political backflip designed to end the relentless pressure to hold a federal inquiry, the Prime Minister is considering combining forces with the previously announced NSW royal commission in the wake of the Bondi terror attacks.

News.com.au has confirmed that this combined probe is one of the options being canvassed after another meeting of the national security committee of cabinet on Wednesday morning.

One of the major weaknesses of holding a NSW royal commission is that it cannot directly investigate or compel evidence from the Commonwealth, its institutions, or officers beyond its jurisdiction with the full force of a federal inquiry.

The power of a state royal commission is limited to matters within the legislative responsibility of New South Wales.

Albo warned over royal commission detail

Mr Albanese is under mounting pressure to ensure that the royal commission can call serving and former ministers as witnesses as it examines the lead-up to the Bondi terror attack.

Former Home Affairs secretary Mike Pezzullo, who has led public calls for a royal commission, said it must have the power to compel ministers to give evidence.

This was the case in the robocall inquiry that ultimately included Scott Morrison and other ministers giving evidence.

“The next challenge will be to get the correct focus and scope,’’ Mr Pezzullo told news.com.au.

“Ministers cannot be excluded from scrutiny. It also has to encompass underlying causes and factors - as we said in the open letter, those being principally the explosion in anti-Semitism and the enduring threat posed by Islamist extremism and terrorism.”

Behind closed doors, a group of Labor MPs are pushing for an inquiry into anti-Semitism to run parallel to the probe being conducted into the intelligence agencies by former ASIO chief Dennis Richardson.

“If you asked me two weeks ago, I would have said there’s a 5 per cent chance of a royal commission. My honest assessment right now I would put it at 90 per cent (of a royal commission),’’ a Labor source said.

“They are shifting. We are shifting. We have to. And it will be a matter of time, but we will shift.

“We can’t be on the other side of the victims. And he doesn’t want to be on the other side of the victims.”

Liberal leader Sussan Ley has called on Mr Albanese to move forward with a royal commission as quickly as possible.

“The Prime Minister has delayed, deflected and looked past victims for far too long now,’’ Ms Ley said.

“Australians are watching. Victims’ families are waiting. And the time for leadership is now. What is the Prime Minister hiding? And why is he not listening?”

Probe into Australia’s intelligence agencies

The Richardson probe into intelligence agencies and the Bondi attack, first revealed by news.com.au on December 20, will investigate whether Australia’s security agencies have the powers, structures, processes and sharing arrangements in place to keep Australians safe.

However, Labor MPs want a royal commission into anti-Semitism to be led by a respected judge that would examine anti-Semitism more broadly, including why Jewish children have to attend school with armed guards.

Mr Albanese is now expected to recall parliament early to introduce hate speech laws, with the possibility MPs could return to Canberra in the week before Australia Day.

Parliament was scheduled to return in early February prior to the Bondi terror attack.

Meanwhile, former Labor MP Michael Danby has accused the Albanese government of seeking to avoid a royal commission into the Bondi terror attack “at all costs”.

“I understand there are some very bitter enders in the Cabinet who are in the socialist left who want to avoid this royal commission at all costs because of things that might come out,” he told Sky News.

“This is a very different government than a normal Labor government. It’s a socialist-left dominated Labor government.

“I’m very pleased to tell you that it’s now up to 25 (signatories) and more former members are putting their names to that petition calling for the government to do the royal commission.

“It ain’t over till it’s over.”

स्रोत: News Com Au

📤 शेयर करें: