Shooting on Bondi beach, Australia. The Australian Police stated, this Monday (22), that the suspect of carrying out the terrorist attack on Bondi beach, in Sydney, was transferred from hospital to prison. He had been hospitalized since the attack. 📱Download the g1 app to see news in real time and for free Naveed Akram, 24, is suspected of, together with his father, Sajid Akram, 50, having killed 15 people and injured 40 others, including two police officers, during a celebration of the Jewish festival of Hanukkah. Sajid died in combat with police after the attack. Naveed was seriously injured and ended up in a coma in the hospital. He is accused of 59 crimes, including “terrorism.” According to authorities, the action may have been inspired by Islamic State ideologies. “Initial indications point to a terrorist attack inspired by the Islamic State,” the spokesperson said at a press conference. The vehicle of the two men suspected of carrying out the attack contained handmade flags of the terrorist group. The car is registered in the youngest’s name. The police also stated that the two had traveled to the Philippines a month before committing the attack. “The reasons why they went to the Philippines, the purpose of this trip and the places they visited are being investigated at this time,” New South Wales Police Commissioner Mal Lanyon told reporters. According to the France-Presse agency, the father entered the Philippines with an Indian passport and the son with an Australian passport. The attack Two men fired shots at people celebrating the date there. The suspects are a father and son, according to police. The father, a 50-year-old man, had a weapons license and died in a confrontation with authorities. The son, aged 24, was detained with serious injuries, but his situation is stable. The ages of the victims range from 10 to 87 years old. The youngest, a girl, died in hospital. During a press conference, New South Wales Police Commissioner Mal Lanyon classified the event as a “terrorist incident”. Among the dead was Rabbi Eli Schlanger, 41, born in London, reported British newspapers The Guardian and BBC News. An Israeli also died during the attack. The Jerusalem Post reported that one of its collaborators, Arsen Ostrovsky, head of the Sydney office of the Australia/Israel & Jewish Affairs Council, was also injured. Itamaraty said that, so far, there is no information about Brazilians affected. Mal Lanyon said police concluded there was no third suspect involved. 40 people were treated at various Sydney hospitals, including two police officers. “The health status of these agents and the other injured people is serious,” said Lanyon. See videos and photos of the attack ‘People helped elderly people to get up and leave’, reports witness Also during the press conference, the Premier of New South Wales, Chris Minns, said that “the attack was planned to hit the Jewish community in Sydney, on the first day of Hanukkah”. Images show one of the shooters being disarmed by a man after the attacks (see video below). “It’s the most unbelievable scene I’ve ever seen: a man approaching a gunman who had shot into the community and single-handedly disarming him, putting his own life at risk to save the lives of countless other people,” said Minns. The man who disarmed the shooter was shot twice, once in the arm and the other in the hand, but is recovering well in hospital, according to a relative, the Guardian newspaper said. He is 43 years old and is a fruit seller. In the United Kingdom, police will reinforce policing in Jewish communities after the attack in Australia. Hanukkah, the Jewish festival of lights, begins on Sunday night, with celebrations planned across the UK in the coming days. ‘Cruel attack’: see the repercussions of the attack on a Jewish event in Australia ‘It looked like a horror film’, said Brazilian who was at the scene ‘Genuine hero’ disarmed beach killer in Sydney, says Australian official Mike Burgess, director general of Australian intelligence (ASIO) said that the agency is analyzing the identity of the shooters and whether there is “anyone in the community who has a similar intention”. “It is important to highlight that, at this time, we do not have any indication of this, but it is something that is being actively investigated,” he stated. According to him, the terrorist threat level in Australia remains “probable”. “I don’t see that changing at this stage. Probable means there is a 50% chance of a terrorist act. Unfortunately, we saw this horrific act occur tonight in Australia.” Australian police added that an “object believed to be an explosive device” was removed from a car near the beach. “A number of suspicious items located nearby are being examined by specialist officers, and an exclusion area has been established,” New South Wales police said in a statement released at 9pm (Australian time). Site of the shooting attack in Sydney, Australia. Arte/g1 Earlier, in a statement, Prime Minister Anthony Albanese stated that the images coming from Bondi were “distressing and shocking”, and that police officers were at the scene to “try to save lives”. Australian Foreign Minister Penny Wong called the Bondi shooting “disgusting” and expressed condolences to the families of the victims of the attack. “Terrorism, anti-Semitism, violence and hatred have no place in Australia,” he said. “My deepest condolences go out to those who lost loved ones tonight. We wish a full recovery to all those injured and extend our sympathies to the Australian Jewish community,” he said. The United States “strongly” condemned the attack. “Anti-Semitism has no place in this world. Our prayers are with the victims of this horrific attack, with the Jewish community and with the people of Australia,” wrote US Secretary of State Marco Rubio in a post on platform Hanukkah day, a festival that celebrates the miracle of peace and light overcoming darkness.” Israeli President Isaac Herzog called the attack “cruel against the Jews” and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu accused the Australian government of having “fueled the fire of anti-Semitism” by recognizing a Palestinian state. The Israeli Confederation of Brazil (Conib) published a note stating that it expresses “its deep consternation and solidarity with the Jewish community in Australia”. Shooting on Bondi Beach, Australia Videos circulating on social media show people dispersing on Bondi beach while several gunshots and police sirens are heard. Deaths in mass shootings are extremely rare in Australia. A 1996 massacre in the Tasmanian city of Port Arthur — when a gunman killed 35 people — led the government to drastically tighten gun laws, making it much more difficult for Australians to acquire firearms. Lawn near Bondi beach, in Australia, after shooting Australia Broadcasting Corporation, via Reuters Aerial image of teams acting after shooting on Bondi beach, in Sydney, Australia Reuters/Reproduction Injured person taken after shooting in Bondi Beach, Australia AP Photo/Mark Baker CONIB says anti-Semitism exploded after Hamas attack
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Australia terror attack suspect transferred from hospital to prison, police say
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