Australia eyes possible foreign role in antisemitic attacks
Australian police are looking into whether foreign actors
have paid local criminals to commit antisemitic offenses after a series of
attacks on sites associated with the country's Jewish community, Prime Minister
Anthony Albanese said on Wednesday.
The crimes have included torching a child care center,
burning cars in largely Jewish neighborhoods and smearing red paint and
graffiti on synagogues in Sydney, while a synagogue in Melbourne was firebombed
in December, injuring one person.
The two southeastern cities are home to 84% of the country's
Jewish population of around 117,000.
What are police investigating?
Albanese said some of the attacks appeared to have been
motivated by financial gain rather than any ideological rationale.
"Some of these are being perpetrated by people who don't
have a particular issue, aren't motivated by an idealogy, but are paid
actors," he said.
"It's unclear who or where the payments are coming
from," he added.
Australian Federal Police Commissioner Reece Kershaw said
detectives were probing whether the attacks had been funded with money from
other countries.
"We are looking into whether overseas actors or
individuals have paid local criminals in Australia to carry out some of these
crimes in our suburbs," he said.
"Part of our inquiries include: Who is paying those
criminals, where those people are, whether they are in Australia or offshore,
and what their motivation is," Kershaw added.
Neither Albanese nor the police offered any details on what
evidence had led to the current suspicion of foreign involvement.
On Wednesday, police charged a 33-year-old man with trying
to set a Sydney synagogue on fire in January, while eight people were charged
on Tuesday with a string of "hate crime-related incidents" dating
back to November, police said.
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