- Family, friends and politicians mourn the security guard killed in the Bondi stabbing attack
- Growing calls for a national domestic violence strategy.
- Manchester City keep their hunt for a fourth straight Premier League title alive.
Relatives, friends and politicians have gathered to mourn the loss of Faraz Tahir, the security guard who died in the Westfield Bondi Junction stabbing attack.
Mr Tahir's close family, who travelled from Pakistan, were reunited with his body for a public prayer service organised by the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community at the Marsden Park Mosque.
Fellow security guard Muhammad Taha, who is still recovering from injuries sustained in the attack, came from hospital to pay his respects to his former colleague.
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese and New South Wales Premier Chris Minns were among the politicians to attend the service.
Imam Inamul ul-Haq Kauser National President of the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community says their presence was recognition of Faraz Tahir's heroic sacrifice in confronting the attacker.
"Although he was a stranger in this country, you can say in one way. But he sacrificed his life for all Australians. He was a very brave person from childhood. When he saw that people were panicking, he rushed to him (the attacker) and he grabbed him - this is the way he sacrified his life."
The National Women's Safety Alliance says governments need to do more to address gender-based violence.
This comes after two women have allegedly been killed this week by men known to them, with 31 women killed this year in Australia.
The New South Wales government will review the state's bail laws after the death of 28 year old woman Molly Ticehurst, allegedly murdered by her former partner, who was out on bail for domestic violence charges at the time.
Executive Director of the National Women's Safety Alliance Katherine Berney has told SBS News violence against women is a national emergency.
"I think it's fair to say that we're in a state of national emergency when we look at male violence and gender-based violence. Our frontline services who I represent are at max capacity. We are in a crisis, and we need solutions quickly, not in another six months."
Channel Seven has reached an undisclosed settlement with a Sydney man wrongly identified on air as the Bondi Junction attacker.
20-year-old university student Ben Cohen had engaged defamation lawyers and sent the channel a concerns notice after he was falsely named as the attacker on Seven's Sunrise on April 14.
Police later identified 40-year-old Joel Cauchi, from Queensland, as the attacker behind the deaths of six people at Westfield Bondi Junction on April 13.
In a statement, a spokesperson from Channel Seven said the network had apologised to Mr Cohen, and the parties had reached a settlement on confidential terms.
Deputy Opposition leader Sussan Ley ) says she supports Elon Musk's comments that Australia has no business policing the internet internationally.
Mr Musk's company X is in a legal battle with Australia's eSafety Commissioner over a takedown order for graphic videos depicting the stabbing of a bishop in Western Sydney.
The company's legal challenge stipulates it doesn't believe the commissioner should have ordered the posts be banned in Australia as they don't "encourage or provoke violence", and sit within public debate and discussion.
Sussan Ley who previously said she was "disappointed" by Mr Musk's behaviour, told Channel 7 Australia can't control what happens overseas.
"We can't apply our laws internationally, and that's patently obvious. We can't make sure that other countries don't see what we would like to protect Australians from seeing. So, I support, and we all support, the eSafety Commissioner at keeping Australians safe online, but we recognise that we can't be the internet police for the whole world."
Manchester City have recorded another big win to keep their hunt for an unprecedented fourth straight Premier League title alive.
23-year-old Phil Foden has continued his career-best scoring season with two goals in City's 4-0 thrashing of Brighton.
City are second with five games remaining, one more than first-placed Arsenal and third-placed Liverpool.
City Coach Pep Guardiola told Optus Sport he thinks all three teams are still involved in the title race.
"Many things can happen. What happened with Liverpool, they dropped two games against Crystal Palace and Everton, can happen to us, can happen to Arsenal - nobody is safe from that."
Meanwhile, leaders Arsenal will take on arch-rivals Tottenham Hotspur, led by former Soccerroos coach Ange Postecoglou, in a crucial fixture this weekend.