'Fundamentally different': Jewish group joins push to split up hate crime bill

There are concerns that the scope of the hate speech laws, which include gun reform and migration changes, "risks" its passage.

WISSAM HADDAD COURT Peter Wertheim

The peak body for Australian Jews has expressed reservations about the legislation, which promises to crack down on antisemitism and extremism in the wake of the Bondi attack. Source: AAP / Bianca De Marchi

The government is facing pressure to split up hate crime speech laws from gun reform ahead of parliament's early return to pass the legislation next week.

On Tuesday, Labor released its draft of the Combatting Antisemitism, Hate and Extremism Bill. The proposal encompasses new criminal offences, increases penalties for existing hate crimes and introduces new security checks for people obtaining firearms.

The peak body for Jewish Australians has joined calls from the Opposition to break up the complex legislation, despite Prime Minister Anthony Albanese reiterating that the bill had to address several issues simultaneously.

"The terrorists at Bondi Beach had hatred in their minds, but guns in their hands, and this bill will get rid of both of these issues," he told reporters on Tuesday.

At 6.41pm on Sunday 14 December, two gunmen — who police allege were father and son Sajid and Naveed Akram — parked a car near a footbridge overlooking Bondi Beach's Arthur Park, where a Hanukkah event had begun earlier that evening, and opened fire, claiming the lives of 15 people.

Speaking to SBS News, Peter Wertheim, co-CEO of the Executive Council of Australian Jewry, expressed concern that the broad-ranging scope "risks the passage" of the legislation.
"I think it would have been wiser to split them up," Wertheim said.

"I know the argument will be made that they both relate to combating hatred and extremism, and in a broad sense, that's true, but when you get down into the detail of what these provisions are all about, they are about fundamentally different subjects."

Wertheim also praised the government for many "positive features", including adding a framework to criminalise hate groups and a new serious vilification offence, which will see anyone inciting hatred based on race facing up to five years imprisonment.

Coalition criticism of gun laws

Nationals senator Bridget McKenzie, a gun owner, has criticised removing firearms from everyday Australians as a result of an attack inspired by the self-proclaimed Islamic State (IS) group.

"Unfortunately, the Prime Minister has chosen to play politics with this bill, he's lumped migration changes in with the management of firearms and obviously in with hate speech laws," she told ABC's Radio National on Wednesday morning.

"And when you look at what problem we are trying to solve here, Islamic terrorists shot Australian Jewish people, this was an attack on our Australian Jewish community. Taking guns off law abiding citizens is not the appropriate response."
Labor MP Josh Burns, who is Jewish, says it is time for the Opposition to demonstrate its criticism of hate and antisemitism inside parliament.

"Those words will be very hollow if the Liberal Party doesn't come in and support us," Burns told ABC's Radio National on Wednesday morning.

He said it was important that not only hate crimes were "outlawed and penalties increased", but that firearms also be restricted from people who shouldn't have access to them.

Concerns over 'rushed' hate speech law review

The government was criticised last month by the Opposition for its response to the Bondi attack and faced backlash in the community for delays in calling a royal commission into antisemitism,

Now it faces criticism over the truncated timeframe for consulting and reviewing the hate speech laws.

The Parliamentary Joint Committee on Intelligence and Security has less than a week to review the laws, with the usually secret committee holding public hearings to receive evidence from relevant agencies.
The Australian Federation of Islamic Councils (AFIC) has hit back at the 72-hour consultation period, calling for the government to defer tabling the legislation until more inclusive consultation, given the "broad impact they could have on the Muslim community".

The group's reservations include a lack of clarity and potential overreach in new criminal penalties, concerns that specific communities are targeted in the legislation and a failure to include religion under new vilification offences.

"If the legislation is truly intended to address hate in all its forms, then the communities most likely to be impacted must be at the table, not as an afterthought, but as genuine partners in shaping the response," AFIC said in a statement.


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By Ewa Staszewska

Source: SBS News



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