politics

'Protests had nothing to do with the attacks': activists condemn premier's plan to restrict rallies after Bondi shooting

December 18, 2025 The Guardian
'Protests had nothing to do with the attacks': activists condemn premier's plan to restrict rallies after Bondi shooting

Activists and Jewish groups criticize NSW Labor's plan to restrict protests after the Bondi shooting.

SUMMARY

The NSW government's plan to restrict protests following the Bondi beach terrorist attack has been widely criticized by pro-Palestine activists, Jewish groups, and civil liberty campaigners who argue it threatens democratic freedoms and unfairly targets the pro-Palestine movement. The premier defends the move as necessary to maintain community harmony and police resources during terrorism designations.

KEY HIGHLIGHTS

  • NSW Labor plans to ban protests during terrorism designations after Bondi attack.
  • Jewish groups and pro-Palestine activists warn the plan could divide communities and suppress legitimate protest.
  • Premier Chris Minns emphasizes the need for calm and togetherness, denying targeting any specific group.
  • Civil liberties council opposes the changes, citing erosion of democratic freedoms.
  • Federal and state leaders discuss the context of antisemitism and the recent attacks.

CORE SUBJECT

NSW protest restrictions after Bondi shooting

A New South Wales government plan to restrict protests in the wake of the Bondi beach terrorist attack has been condemned by two Jewish groups who are vocal supporters of the Palestine movement, with one warning against "allowing culture wars to distract and divide responses to Sunday's antisemitic mass shooting".

The state premier, Chris Minns, announced on Wednesday Labor would move to effectively ban protests when there's a "terrorism designation" - which is for an undefined time period. Minns also vowed to strengthen gun laws.

The protest crackdown would mean people couldn't lodge a so-called form 1 to hold an authorised protest during terrorism designations. That would mean protesters could be charged under the Summary Offences Act if they marched down the road and blocked traffic, for example.

Minns said on Wednesday: "I'm firmly of the view, having spoken with many community members, not just from the Jewish community, but right across Sydney, that protests right now in Sydney would be incredibly terrible for our community, in fact, they would rip apart our community. Particularly, protests about international events."

The premier added: "I'm not aware of any [planned] protests at the moment."

While there were weekly pro-Palestine protests against the war in Gaza over the past few years, there have only been two major events after a ceasefire was announced in mid-October. Organisers also said there were no protests planned.

Max Kaiser, the executive officer of the Jewish Council of Australia, said his group was concerned culture wars could divide communities and distract from the need for a unified response to antisemitism.

Minns said that the proposed change was not directed at any one group, but Kaiser feared it was directed at the pro-Palestine movement, after some people criticised it in the wake of Sunday's mass shooting.

"We have been inundated with support from our Palestinian allies and the wider movement, who are appalled at this antisemitic attack and stand against all forms of racism," Kaiser said.

"It's disturbing that the media and politicians are maligning this movement when there exists very real sources of antisemitism on the far-right, including neo-Nazis and the proliferation of extreme antisemitic propaganda on social media."

Jesse McNicoll, who is part of the group Jewish Voices of Inner Sydney, said it was "outrageous" that the pain of his community could be used to shut down a movement "opposing genocide".

"The protests had nothing to do with the attacks," he said.

Police have alleged the Bondi beach gunmen, 24-year-old Naveed Akram and his father, Sajid Akram, 50, were "inspired by Isis".

Asio and police confirmed they had some knowledge of Naveed, with the prime minister saying an investigation ran for six months from October 2019.

"[Naveed Akram] was examined on the basis of being associated with others," Anthony Albanese said this week. "The assessment was made that there was no indication of any ongoing threat or threat of him engaging in violence."

The federal government's antisemitism envoy, Jillian Segal, said on Monday: "This did not come without warning. In Australia, it began on 9 October 2023 at the Sydney Opera House. We then watched a march across the Sydney Harbour Bridge waving terrorist flags and glorifying extremist leaders. Now death has reached Bondi beach."

Segal said on Tuesday there was no "silver bullet" and combating antisemitism required a "multi-factorial, multifaceted approach".

On Thursday, Albanese was asked about Minns' plan to restrict protests, and if he thought protests contributed to Sunday's attack, or whether he had concerns about future demonstrations.

"Hatred starts with language, and then moves to action and vilification, and then can lead to an escalation of it," the prime minister told reporters.

"The day of the Opera House demonstration. I thought it was completely reprehensible. I called for it to not go ahead. That does nothing to advance any cause.

"We need to be able to have political discourse in this country, which is respectful, and to respectfully disagree, but a line has been crossed over and over again in the way that some of this debate has been conducted."

On 9 October 2023, a Palestine Action Group rally walked from Town Hall to the Sydney Opera House where the Israeli flag was to be projected following the Hamas attacks on Israel on 7 October. A fringe group then joined and chanted antisemitic slogans.

David Ossip, the president of the NSW Jewish Board of Deputies, said on Monday that "for two years, people have paraded in our streets and universities calling for the intifada to be globalised, a catchphrase which means kill Jews wherever you find them".

"Last night, the interfada was globalised and came to Bondi. What we've seen has been the logical progression. Demonising Jews with rhetoric, which slowly builds up to acts of violence and then acts of violence which last night took life."

Alex Ryvchin, co-CEO of the Executive Council of Australian Jewry, told Sky News this week: "This is the worst fears of the Jewish community. It's been bubbling under the surface for a long time and now it's actually happened."

The former federal treasurer Josh Frydenberg, who is Jewish, on Wednesday demanded the government ban pro-Palestinian protests he claimed had become "incubators of hate".

Josh Lees, a spokesperson for the Palestine Action Group, said he had received death threats since Sunday's mass murder. He said the inflammatory comments about protests had turbocharged vitriol against a movement that opposed both genocide and antisemitism. He stressed the group had no protests planned.

"This movement, which has always rejected antisemitism and all other forms of racism, has been a shining example of unity and a rejection of racist division," he said.

Minns said he wanted to restrict protests during terrorist designations on the basis rallies could "both stretch police resources and secondly, add to community disharmony and, as a result, a combustible situation in the state".

The premier acknowledged he couldn't promise protests would not take place because it was not within his or the police commissioner's power to do so. But Minns said: "We can promise the streets won't be taken over with a mass demonstration that can lead to community disharmony and divisions. We need a summer of calm and togetherness, not division."

The premier said the government was "looking at the timescales" regarding how long a terror designation would last, to ensure that it's consistent with, obviously, our obligations under the Australian constitution [and] the implied freedom of political communication".

The NSW Council for Civil Liberties has opposed the proposed changes to protest laws.

Timothy Roberts, the council's president, said: "We cannot have a 'summer of calm' and 'togetherness' with a government eroding our democratic freedoms."

"Connecting the horrific events of the Bondi attack in any way with recent protests continues the harmful trend of conflating criticism of the actions of the government of Israel with antisemitism," Roberts said.

KEYWORDS

NSW Labor protests Bondi shooting antisemitism Palestine movement Chris Minns terrorism designation civil liberties

MENTIONED ENTITIES 14

Chris Minns

👤 Person_Male

Premier of New South Wales

Max Kaiser

👤 Person_Male

Executive officer of the Jewish Council of Australia

Jesse McNicoll

👤 Person_Male

Member of Jewish Voices of Inner Sydney

Naveed Akram

👤 Person_Male

Bondi beach gunman, 24 years old

Sajid Akram

👤 Person_Male

Father of Naveed Akram, 50 years old

Anthony Albanese

👤 Person_Male

Prime Minister of Australia

Jillian Segal

👤 Person_Female

Federal government's antisemitism envoy

David Ossip

👤 Person_Male

President of the NSW Jewish Board of Deputies

Alex Ryvchin

👤 Person_Male

Co-CEO of the Executive Council of Australian Jewry

Josh Frydenberg

👤 Person_Male

Former federal treasurer, Jewish community member

Josh Lees

👤 Person_Male

Spokesperson for the Palestine Action Group

Timothy Roberts

👤 Person_Male

President of the NSW Council for Civil Liberties

NSW Council for Civil Liberties

🏛️ Organization

Organization opposing proposed protest law changes

Palestine Action Group

🏛️ Organization

Group organizing pro-Palestine protests

NOTABLE QUOTES 5

"I'm firmly of the view, having spoken with many community members, not just from the Jewish community, but right across Sydney, that protests right now in Sydney would be incredibly terrible for our community, in fact, they would rip apart our community. Particularly, protests about international events."

— Chris Minns

"We have been inundated with support from our Palestinian allies and the wider movement, who are appalled at this antisemitic attack and stand against all forms of racism."

— Max Kaiser

"The protests had nothing to do with the attacks."

— Jesse McNicoll

"We cannot have a 'summer of calm' and 'togetherness' with a government eroding our democratic freedoms."

— Timothy Roberts

"This movement, which has always rejected antisemitism and all other forms of racism, has been a shining example of unity and a rejection of racist division."

— Josh Lees

KEY DECISIONS 1

NSW Labor to effectively ban protests during terrorism designations.

Decision Maker: Chris Minns
Status: proposed
Announced: 2025-12-17
Impact Areas:
protest regulation public order

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