Bondi shooting now: Live updates as terrorists revealed as father and son while Netanyahu condemns attack
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Key Events
What we know about the surviving victims of terror attack
NSW Health has provided an update on the surviving victims of the Bondi Beach terror attack, with 40 patients being cared for at hospitals across Sydney.
Sixteen people lost their lives after two gunmen opened fire at the beach on Sunday evening as hundreds of people gathered there for an event to celebrate the first day of Hanukkah.
Two of those 16 people — a 10-year-old girl and a 40-year-old man – were rushed to hospital but tragically died overnight.
Prime Minister lays flowers at scene of Bondi Beach and meets with police
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has visited the scene of the Bondi Beach massacre and the Bondi Police Station to lay flowers and pay tribute to the lives lost.
At least 16 people have died after two gunmen shot at a Jewish event. Among the dead is believed to be a 10-year-old, with the oldest victim aged 87.
The PM paused for a moment after laying flowers and spoke with officers at the scene.
Anti-Semitism envoy says Australia must act
Antisemitism envoy Jillian Segal said the Bondi shooting was an attack on the Jews of Australia and an attack on Australia.
“As the Prime Minister said and as the premier said, this is a time for us now to come together and to embrace the Jewish community,” she told ABC radio.
“But we need more than embracing we need to understand that this pure evil is anti-Semitism. It’s not random thoughts, it’s true anti-Semitism, which is the Australia that we cannot accept.
“We have to do things about this.”
Ms Segal delivered a report on combatting anti-Semitism to the Government in July.
She said there had beens ome progress made on that blueprint but that she now wanted to see politicians and leaders “approach that with new energy”.
Ms Segal anticipated the Government’s initial response would be to strengthen security for Jewish institutions and community places, but that that alone wasn’t enough.
“We need to tackle that. We need to understand that that is not part of the Australia that we want for the future.”
Eerie scenes at Bondi Beach
Locals have described eerie scenes at the world famous Bondi Beach on the morning after a mass shooting claimed the lives of 16 people.
Many remain at the scene, helping to clean up the thousands of items left behind as people ran for their lives.
Phones, wallets, and entire bags have been left behind as people ran from the shots being fired into crowds at North Bondi on Sunday night.


“People have literally just got up and run for their lives,” local Holly Harris told NewsWire as she picked up belongings.
Another local, Cameron Sargent, said he had handed in five phones to lifeguards by 6am after arriving in the dark for the clean up.
“It’s just devastating, it’s such a dark day for Sydney,” he said.
Frydenberg calls for accountability from the Albanese Government
Former Liberal Treasurer Josh Frydenberg has called for accountability from the Albanese Government after at least 16 people were killed in a massacre at Bondi Beach on Sunday evening.
“In our own country, we have leaders who have failed their first and most fundamental duty to protect the safety of their citizens, and now we have a massacre at one of Australia’s iconic sites, Bondi Beach,” he told Sky News.
“The news coming through by the hour of children losing their lives, of parents losing their lives, of Holocaust survivors, losing their lives. Who is going to be accountable for this?
“Who is going to take personal responsibility for this?
“It starts with our Prime Minister, and it goes down through his ministers and everybody who is in a position of responsibility who has failed in their public duty to protect our citizens.”
Jewish community leaders angered at lack of action on antisemitism
Executive Council of Australian Jewry co-CEO Alex Ryvchin has expressed his concern for the Australian Jewish Community saying they’re no longer safe in Australia.
Mr Ryvchin has told Sky News that antisemitism in Australia had reached an “urgent security situation” which had reached “a crisis of a new magnitude”.
He was critical of the Australian Government for not acting on a “blueprint” which the Jewish community had delivered earlier in 2025. It comes as recommendations remain unactioned from the Special Envoy’s Plan to Combat Antisemitism.
“We’re not safe. If Jews get slaughtered on Bondi Beach and body bags are piling up at this place, we’re not safe,” he said.
“There is evil among us, and if we don’t rip it out by the root.... we’re going to go down a darker and darker path.”
‘Tsunami of hate’: Frydenberg condemns attack on Jewish community
Former Treasurer Josh Frydenberg has condemned the attack on Australia’s Jewish community, calling the act of terror a “tragedy of unimaginable proportions.”
Mr Frydenberg says the attack was “all too predictable” and questioned why leaders have not listened to intelligence warnings of the dangerous rise in antisemitism.
“The massacre we have seen at one of our nation’s most iconic landmarks is the culmination of an unprecedented failure of leadership to heed the warning signs that were so obvious to every Australian who opened their eyes,” he wrote in a statement shared on X.
“The last two years have been a tsunami of hate that has left the local Jewish community feeling abandoned and alone.”
Mr Frydenberg also blasted Prime Minister Anthony Albanese for failing to make Australia safe for Jews.
“Everything must now change from here. Everything must be on the table. The law must be enforced,” he wrote.
Everything you need to know from Albanese, Minns update
- Two gunmen were father and son. The 50-year-old is deceased, and the 24-year-old is in hospital.
- Police are not looking for a third suspect.
- 15 innocent people died. Victims’ age ranges from 10 to 87.
- Police raided two properties on Sunday night, one in Bonnyrigg (primary residence) and a second at Campsie (where the pair stayed before the attack).
- The 50-year-old had a firearms licence, with six registered firearms. He had a gun licence for 10 years.
- Two IEDs were found at the scene. They had not been activated.
- There will be an increased police presence around Jewish places of worship and community.
- Police are still investigating the motive behind the gunmen.
- People are being urged to donate blood
Albanese dodges Netanyahu question
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has been asked to respond to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s comments that blamed the Government’s decision to recognise Palestinian statehood for the rise of anti-Semitic attacks in Australia.
Mr Albanese avoided answering the question, instead saying, “This is a moment for national unity”.
“This is a moment for Australians to come together. That’s precisely what we’ll be doing.”
He added that authorities had done an “extraordinary job”.
Two NSW police officers in critical but stable condition
NSW Police Commissioner Mal Lanyon says two NSW police officers injured in Sunday’s attack are in a critical but stable condition in hospital.
“The thoughts of NSW Police are with those officers and their families,” Mr Lanyon said.
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