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PM condemns ‘brutality and cruelty’ of October attack

Anthony Albanese condemned acts of hate in a parliament address after joining a vigil in Melbourne. (James Ross/AAP PHOTOS)

By Tess Ikonomou, Dominic Giannini, Kat Wong and Nyk Carnsew

Anthony Albanese has marked the anniversary of Hamas’ attack on Israel as an attempt to unite parliament in condemnation of the violence failed.

The prime minister issued a call for the House of Representatives to condemn the October 7 attack on Tuesday.

The motion includes a call for the immediate release of the remaining Israeli hostages, in addition to recognising the number of Palestinian civilians killed in Gaza and the catastrophic humanitarian situation.

“This past year must have felt like a cruel eternity,” Mr Albanese said.

“The number of civilians who have lost their lives out of the past year is a tragedy of horrific proportions.

“So much has been lost, loved ones buried. We join all of them in their grief.”

Mr Albanese condemned the “poison of anti-Semitism”.

Speaking a year on from the attack, the prime minister highlighted the “brutality and the cruelty that was inflicted on so many with such cold calculation”.

“We think of all whose life and futures were stolen from them that day,” he said.

Mr Albanese also issued a warning to anyone thinking about taking a Hamas or Hezbollah flag to a protest.

“These symbols are not acceptable,” he said.

“They are symbols of terror. They are illegal, and they will not be tolerated here.”

In response, Opposition Leader Peter Dutton slammed Mr Albanese and said the coalition could not support the motion.

“The prime minister is trying to speak out of both sides of his mouth … today is the day where this parliament was meant to mark what should be a solemn moment, a solemn moment where 1200 people lost their lives and that is the position that we put to the house,” he said.

“We have put to this prime minister a more than reasonable position and the prime minister has rejected that position for his own political domestic advancement and that has been recognised by millions of Australians, and for that, the prime minister should be condemned.”

Jewish Labor MP Josh Burns said the “lives of too many innocent people were cut down in an instant” on October 7.

He said recent protests had “some of the most aggressive and unnecessarily confrontational” symbols of hate and terror.

“We have to be the people here in Australia who say that for all communities and for all Australians, you belong, you are part of the Australian society, and that we as people see a shared future, a shared future of people who share our humanity,” he said.

Jewish Liberal MP Julian Leeser said the coalition wished it could support the motion.

“We can’t have a ceasefire at the moment that would allow terrorist organisations that we list as terrorist organisations in our own country to regroup and reform and continue to attack innocent civilians,” he said.

He criticised Labor for not adopting a judicial inquiry into anti-Semitism at universities which he said had allowed some “bad ideas” about Jewish people to fester.

More than 1200 Australians, permanent residents and immediate family members have been evacuated from Lebanon as the federal government continues urging people to leave.

Six Australian government flights have ferried people to safety, while a further 3892 Australians and their families are registered to depart, with vulnerable and displaced passengers prioritised.

In two weeks, Israel’s bombing campaign has killed more than 1400 Lebanese people and left another 1.2 million without homes.

This new front in Israel’s war opened after a year of violence in Gaza.

On October 7, 2023, Hamas led an attack on Israel, killing 1200 and taking about 250 hostage, according to the Israeli government.

In response, Israel bombed and invaded Gaza while laying siege to its population, killing more than 41,000 people and leaving most of the territory’s residents displaced and facing starvation.

The first anniversary of the attacks was marked across Australia with vigils held by the Jewish community to remember those killed, the families grieving and the hostages who remain captive.

Community leaders warned of an unprecedented rise of anti-Semitism in Australia since the October 7 attack and called for the federal government to do more to stem the tide of abuse.

Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke is also reviewing the visa of a US guest speaker who reportedly called October 7 a day of celebration at a rally at Lakemba Mosque in Sydney’s west.

Mr Albanese attended a vigil to mark the one-year anniversary of the attack by Hamas, which Australia designates as a terrorist organisation.

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One Response to PM condemns ‘brutality and cruelty’ of October attack

cbrapsycho says: 8 October 2024 at 2:58 pm

Dutton thinks that dividing the nation to only support Israelis and oppose Palestinians is appropriate. The idea is racist. Albanese is not speaking out of both sides of his mouth, but directly saying Australians should unite in mourning violence and brutality against all human beings.

Albanese has condemned Hamas and is differentiating the terrorist organisation from the Palestinian people including innocent children. Dutton fails to see the difference, just as he is unable to see that not all Jews support Israel’s actions. He considers anyone who opposes the Netanyahu government actions and the IDF actions as antisemitic, a ridiculous claim given many Israelis oppose Netanyahu’s actions and those of the IDF.

The continuing and increasing violence will not make Israelis safe, as the former Israeli PM noted on ABC 730 last night, where he went on to say only a 2 state solution will make Israelis and Palestinians safe.

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