Connect with us

RSS

Australian Politician Whose Signs Were Hit With Swastikas Says Time Has Come to ‘Show Up for the Jewish Community’

Australian Member of Parliament Andrew Wallace. Photo: Screenshot

Vandals targeted the campaign yard signs of Australian parliamentarian Andrew Wallace in the country’s Sunshine Coast this past weekend, drawing black swastikas over his face on the blue and yellow Liberal National Party ads.

In addition to speaking out forcefully against antisemitism, Wallace serves as deputy chair of the Parliament’s Intelligence and Security Committee and chair of the Australia-Israel Allies Caucus. He previously worked as Speaker of the House of Representatives and led the campaign that resulted in the criminalization of publicly displaying Nazi symbols, including performing the Sieg Heil salute.

“I have never seen antisemitism as widespread and prevalent on the Sunshine Coast as we are experiencing today,” Wallace said after his campaign signs were vandalized. “Online and on our streets, we are confronting an antisemitism crisis – and it’s only getting worse.”

Wallace said that during the previous nine years he “had plenty of my election signs damaged and defaced, which is in itself a criminal offense, but this is beyond the pale and an affront to the dignity of Jewish Australians who have a right to live their lives in peace. We are better than this.”

Describing how he felt “absolutely appalled by this behavior,” Wallace said “Australia’s antisemitism crisis demands strong leadership, and [Prime Minister] Anthony Albanese, supported by his Teal and Green allies, has proven incapable and in fact, unwilling, to stand up to antisemitism and hate.”

Going further, Wallace urged for listeners to “ask yourself how we got here. The answer is simple: weak leadership, poor decisions, and wrong priorities from Anthony Albanese.”

Following the vandalism, the Australian Jewish Association said that Wallace “is a strong supporter of the Jewish community and Israel and a friend of the AJA.”

Wallace added that “it’s time for Australians to stand up, speak up, and show up for the Jewish community. Report graffiti and all forms of antisemitism to the police and stamp it out in conversation and online.”

Australia has seen a wave of crimes targeting Jews the last six months which authorities have linked to foreign actors paying with cryptocurrency for the antisemitic hate crimes. On March 11, police announced the arrest and charging of 14 people allegedly involved in an organized crime network behind some of the incidents.

“None of the individuals we have arrested … have displayed any form of antisemitic ideology,” New South Wales Police deputy commissioner David Hudson said. “I think these organized crime figures have taken an opportunity to play off the vulnerability of the Jewish community.”

However, Australian Jewish leaders have urged continued vigilance, expressing disappointment with what they described as law enforcement downplaying the severity of the recent spree of antisemitic crimes.

On March 20, police arrested an unnamed 41-year-old man for alleged involvement in the Jan. 29 vandalism of the Jewish day school Mount Sinai College in Maroubra, New South Wales. The graffiti included the phrases “Jew dogs” and “Jews are the real terrorists.”

In December 2024, an arsonist attacked the Adass Israel Synagogue in Melbourne, prompting a response from about 60 firefighters with 17 fire trucks. Albanese said at the time that “to attack a place of worship is an attack on Australian values. To attack a synagogue is an act of antisemitism, is attacking the right that all Australians should have to practice their faith in peace and security.”

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu linked the synagogue attack with Australian government policy toward Israel. “Unfortunately, it is impossible to separate this reprehensible act from the extreme anti-Israeli position of the Labor government in Australia, including the scandalous decision to support the UN resolution calling on Israel ‘to bring an end to its unlawful presence in the Occupied Palestinian Territory, as rapidly as possible,’ and preventing a former Israeli minister from entering the country,” Netanyahu said.

Since its formation in December, the New South Wales Police Department’s Strike Force Pearl — created to counter antisemitic crime — has made at least 30 arrests.

In an interview with Sky News, Wallace revealed that the vandalism targeting his campaign signs had continued on Monday.

“It’s happened again last night as well — I’ve had reports that the same person it looks like has been out spraying the Nazi cross on my signs,” he said on Tuesday. “Unfortunately, what we’re seeing on the far left of politics and it has to be said on the far right of politics, are that these people are utilizing what happened on Oct. 7, 2023, for their own political purposes. This is a symbol that reflects the death of six million Jews.”

Thanks to Wallace’s efforts, display of that symbol in Australia can now result in a year’s imprisonment.

“I want people who are engaged in antisemitism to be held to account, to be charged, to be incarcerated,” Albanese said following the law’s passage in February.

The post Australian Politician Whose Signs Were Hit With Swastikas Says Time Has Come to ‘Show Up for the Jewish Community’ first appeared on Algemeiner.com.

Continue Reading

RSS

Iran’s Supreme Leader Says Trump Is Lying When He Speaks of Peace

Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei speaks during a meeting with government officials in Tehran, Iran, April 15, 2025. Office of the Iranian Supreme Leader/WANA (West Asia News Agency)/Handout via REUTERS/File Photo

Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei accused Donald Trump on Saturday of lying when the US president said during his Gulf tour this week that he wanted peace in the region.

On the contrary, said Khamenei, the United States uses its power to give “10-ton bombs to the Zionist (Israeli) regime to drop on the heads of Gaza’s children.”

Trump told reporters aboard Air Force One after departing the United Arab Emirates on Friday that Iran had to move quickly on a US proposal for its nuclear program or “something bad’s going to happen.”

His remarks, said Khamenei, “aren’t even worth responding to.” They are an “embarrassment to the speaker and the American people,” Khamenei added.

“Undoubtedly, the source of corruption, war, and conflict in this region is the Zionist regime — a dangerous, deadly cancerous tumor that must be uprooted; it will be uprooted,” he said at an event at a religious center in Tehran, according to state media.

Earlier on Saturday, Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian said Trump speaks about peace while simultaneously making threats.

“Which should we believe?” Pezeshkian said at a naval event in Tehran. “On the one hand, he speaks of peace and on the other, he threatens with the most advanced tools of mass killing.”

Tehran would continue Iran-US nuclear talks but is not afraid of threats. “We are not seeking war,” Pezeshkian said.

While Trump said on Friday that Iran had a US proposal about its nuclear program, Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi in a post on X said Tehran had not received any such proposal. “There is no scenario in which Iran abandons its hard-earned right to (uranium) enrichment for peaceful purposes…” he said.

Araqchi warned on Saturday that Washington’s constant change of stance prolongs nuclear talks, state TV reported.

“It is absolutely unacceptable that America repeatedly defines a new framework for negotiations that prolongs the process,” the broadcast quoted Araqchi as saying.

Pezeshkian said Iran would not “back down from our legitimate rights”.

“Because we refuse to bow to bullying, they say we are source of instability in the region,” he said.

A fourth round of Iran-U.S. talks ended in Oman last Sunday. A new round has not been scheduled yet.

The post Iran’s Supreme Leader Says Trump Is Lying When He Speaks of Peace first appeared on Algemeiner.com.

Continue Reading

RSS

Hamas Confirms New Gaza Ceasefire Talks with Israel in Qatar on Saturday

Doha, Qatar. Photo: StellarD via Wikimedia Commons.

A new round of Gaza ceasefire negotiations between Hamas and Israel is underway in Qatar’s Doha, Hamas official Taher al-Nono told Reuters on Saturday.

He said the two sides were discussing all issues without “pre-conditions.”

Nono said Hamas was “keen to exert all the effort needed” to help mediators make the negotiations a success, adding there was “no certain offer on the table.”

The negotiations come despite Israel preparing to expand operations in the Gaza Strip as they seek “operational control” in some areas of the war-torn enclave.

The return to negotiations also comes after US President Donald Trump ended a Middle East tour on Friday with no apparent progress towards a new ceasefire, although he acknowledged Gaza’s growing hunger crisis and the need for aid deliveries.

The post Hamas Confirms New Gaza Ceasefire Talks with Israel in Qatar on Saturday first appeared on Algemeiner.com.

Continue Reading

RSS

Report: ICC’s Khan Goes on Administrative Leave Amid Sexual Misconduct Probe

International Criminal Court Prosecutor Karim Khan speaks during an interview with Reuters in The Hague, Netherlands, Feb. 12, 2024. Photo: REUTERS/Piroschka van de Wouw

i24 NewsChief prosecutor of the International Criminal Court Karim Khan has stepped down temporarily as an investigation into his alleged sexual misconduct by United Nations investigators is nearing its final phase, Reuters reported on Friday citing sources from the international court.

Khan allegedly forced sexual intercourse upon a member of staff on multiple occasions, the Wall Street Journal reported last week, linking the allegations to Khan’s decision to issue arrest warrants for Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and then-defense minister Yoav Gallant.

A statement is expected later today announcing that Khan is going on administrative leave, according to a source in the prosecutor’s office.

The post Report: ICC’s Khan Goes on Administrative Leave Amid Sexual Misconduct Probe first appeared on Algemeiner.com.

Continue Reading

Copyright © 2017 - 2023 Jewish Post & News