Politics
Australia PM vows to stamp out hatred as nation mourns youngest Bondi Beach victim

- PM targets extremist preachers and hate-linked visas.
- Plan to list organisations tied to hate speech.
- Serious race-based vilification to become federal offence.
SYDNEY: Australia’s prime minister vowed to stamp out extremism on Thursday as the nation mourned the youngest victim of the Bondi Beach shooting, a 10-year-old girl remembered as “our little ray of sunshine”.
Father-and-son gunmen are accused of firing into crowds at a beachside Jewish festival on Sunday evening, killing 15 in an onslaught authorities linked to “Daesh ideology”.
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese promised a sweeping crackdown to banish the “evil of antisemitism from our society”.
“Australians are shocked and angry. I am angry. It is clear we need to do more to combat this evil scourge,” he told reporters.
This included new powers to target extremist preachers and to refuse or cancel visas for those who spread “hate and division”.
Australia would develop a regime for listing organisations whose leaders engage in hate speech, he said.
“Serious vilification” based on race would become a federal offence.
As the prime minister spoke, mourners gathered for the funeral of 10-year-old Matilda, the youngest victim slain in the attack.
“Matilda is our little ray of sunshine,” said the rabbi leading the service, reading out a message from her school.
“She is genuinely the most kind, caring and compassionate young girl, who brightened everyone’s day with her radiant smile and infectious laugh.”
Black-clad mourners clutched bouquets of lilies as they filed into the funeral at Sydney’s Chevra Kadisha, a Jewish society responsible for customary burial rites.
Others held balloons emblazoned with pictures of bumblebees, a reference to the young girl’s nickname “Matilda Bee”.
Photos taken in the hours before the first bullets were fired showed the young girl stroking animals at a petting zoo and smiling after having her face painted.
Matilda’s family — who have asked media not to publish their last name — left Ukraine to settle in Australia before the Russian invasion.
“I couldn’t imagine I would lose my daughter here. It’s just a nightmare,” mother Valentyna told reporters ahead of the funeral.
“It just stays here and here, and I can’t get it out,” she said, pointing to her head and heart.
Her father, Michael, said they chose her name as a nod to Australia, where the beloved folk song “Waltzing Matilda” is sung as an unofficial national anthem.
“We came here from Ukraine, and Matilda was our firstborn here in Australia,” he said earlier this week.
“And I thought that Matilda was the most Australian name that could ever exist.
“So just remember. Remember her name.”
Extremist ideology
Sajid Akram and his son Naveed are accused of opening fire on the Jewish Hanukkah celebration in an antisemitic attack.

Father Sajid, 50, was killed in a shootout with police but 24-year-old Naveed survived.
Reportedly an unemployed bricklayer, Naveed was charged on Wednesday with 15 murders, an act of terrorism, and dozens of other serious crimes.
Authorities believe the pair were radicalised by ” Daesh ideology”.
Australian police are investigating whether the pair met with extremists during a visit to the Philippines weeks before the shooting.
The Philippines said on Wednesday there was no evidence that the country was being used for “terrorist training”.
Questions are mounting over whether authorities could have acted earlier to foil the gunmen.
Naveed came to the attention of Australia’s intelligence agency in 2019.
But he was not considered to be an imminent threat at the time.
The attack has also revived allegations that Australia is dragging its feet in the fight against antisemitism.
“We stand at a very important moment,” government envoy for antisemitism Jillian Segal said Thursday.
“Not only for our community, but for fighting antisemitism around the world.”
Australia’s leaders have agreed to toughen laws that allowed Sajid Akram to own six guns.
The Bondi Beach attack is the deadliest mass shooting since 35 people were killed in the Port Arthur massacre of 1996.
That shooting sparked sweeping reform of Australia’s gun laws.
However, in recent years a steady rise has been documented in privately owned firearms.
Politics
In White House speech, Trump highlights victories amid sinking approval ratings

- Trump addresses 2025 accomplishments amid low approval ratings.
- Poll shows only 33% approve of Trump’s economic handling.
- Speech may tout policies to come next year.
In a rare evening address from the White House, US President Donald Trump boasted on Wednesday of his accomplishments and blamed his Democratic predecessor for soaring consumer prices as his party braces for a tough midterm election next year.
“Eleven months ago, I inherited a mess, and I’m fixing it,” Trump said in his opening remarks.
The Republican president, who regularly complains that he does not get credit for his accomplishments, touted his administration’s work this year on a range of issues from reducing border crossings to bringing down prices of some goods.
The address offered an opportunity for the president, if he could stay on message, to address people’s concerns about affordability, an issue that Trump, a Republican, has repeatedly referred to as a Democratic hoax. And again on Wednesday, he blamed the previous administration led by former President Joe Biden, even as Trump conceded that prices remain high.
“I am bringing those high prices down and bringing them down very fast,” he said.
Trump’s Republicans are seeking to maintain control of the House of Representatives and Senate in the November elections next year, while Democrats are highlighting affordability concerns and differences over healthcare policy in an attempt to wrest power away.
High inflation during Biden’s four years in office helped Trump beat former Vice President Kamala Harris in last year’s election. But Trump’s tariff policies this year have created uncertainty and lifted prices in an economy that has now been overseen by his administration for nearly a year — and Trump, like Biden before him, has been struggling to persuade Americans that the economy is healthy.
A new Reuters/Ipsos poll on Tuesday showed just 33% of US adults approve of how Trump has handled the economy.
Trump’s remarks took place in the White House’s Diplomatic Reception Room and not the Oval Office, as presidential addresses often do.
Before the speech, the Senate’s top Democrat, Chuck Schumer of New York, contended that Trump had failed to live up to his campaign promises.
“He promised he’d bring costs down on day one. That was his number-one promise. That was the number-one reason he won the election. And costs are going up and up and up,” Schumer said at a news conference on Capitol Hill.
Politics
Dubai RTA’s groundbreaking drone initiative transforms traffic signal maintenance

The Roads and Transport Authority (RTA) in Dubai has rolled out a pilot initiative that uses drones to clean traffic lights, as part of efforts to modernise its operational systems.
According to an official statement, the initiative aligns with the authority’s future-focused vision of improving efficiency, optimising resource use and enhancing road safety.
The move aims to eliminate the need for cranes and heavy machinery, reducing safety risks during maintenance.
Officials say the use of drones will also lower costs, save fuel and water, and help reduce environmental pollution.
The statement said that in the first phase, drones were tested on traffic signals along Morocco Street and other key junctions.
During the trials, traffic was temporarily halted.
It says that drones can clean a section of a traffic signal in just three to four minutes, cutting cleaning time by 25 to 50%, while the initiative is also expected to reduce costs by about 15%.
The project cuts operational costs by limiting the use of heavy equipment, while supporting sustainability goals through lower fuel and water consumption and reduced emissions from conventional machinery, the RTA said in its statement published on its website.
Abdullah Ali Lootah, Director of the Roads and Facilities Maintenance Department at RTA, said, “The authority aims to adopt cutting-edge technologies to enhance maintenance work and ensure sustainable operational efficiency across Dubai’s road network.”
“The pilot phase involved comparing drone-based cleaning with traditional methods in terms of time, cost, quality of execution and compliance with safety requirements.”
Lootah added that the first phase included several trial runs at the intersection of Marrakech Street and Rabat Street, with limited traffic closures to ensure safety during the initial testing period.
“Preliminary results showed a reduction in operational time of between 25% and 50%, with the drone cleaning one side of a traffic signal in just three to four minutes,” the official said.
He noted that operational costs were estimated to have fallen by up to 15% compared with traditional methods, a figure expected to rise to 25% in the future with the use of more advanced drone technologies.
Lootah confirmed that the pilot project would continue to ensure the effective use of drones in maintenance work.
“The next phase will focus on refining cleaning methods to maximise safety and avoid disrupting traffic flow, helping improve operational quality and strengthen Dubai’s road infrastructure and transport network,” he said.
Politics
President Trump pardons American-Pakistani Imaad Zuberi

WASHINGTON: US President Donald Trump has added Gobble and Waddle, two Thanksgiving turkeys, to his list of second-term pardons.
However, during his first year in this term, he has given clemency to 83 criminals. Among them is an American-Pakistani, Imaad Shah Zuberi, who appears on the list twice.
First, he was pardoned on May 28, 2025. According to the US Department of Justice, on February 18, 2021, Zuberi was sentenced to 144 months’ imprisonment, three years’ supervised release, a $1,750,000 fine, and $15,705,080.11 in restitution.
Zuberi’s offences were described as “violations of the Foreign Agents Registration Act; tax evasion; foreign, conduit, and other illegal campaign contributions; and tampering with a witness, victim, or informant (obstruction of justice)”.
On October 1, 2025, Zuberi’s commutation was amended. Since then, Zuberi has been on the move and is planning overseas trips, claimed a trusted source in Washington, DC.
The Office of the Pardon Attorney has not provided a reason for President Trump’s decision to pardon Zuberi. However, another source claimed: “Zuberi is back, and he has high aims for his future.”
Who Is Zuberi?
Back on September 16, 2023, under the title “Who trapped disgraced US diplomat Richard Olson”, Geo News published an exclusive story about the role of Zuberi.
Zuberi’s family hails from Karachi. He positioned himself as a venture capitalist and power broker in Los Angeles, funding high-profile US politicians. He was considered a Democrat and was known to comfortably rub shoulders with top political leaders, including the Clintons, Obama, and Joe Biden, to name a few.
Before being sentenced, Zuberi contacted numerous foreign diplomats, offering to lobby for them while making high-level political contacts in many countries, including his native Pakistan. Showcasing his dazzling array of US political connections, he solicited business deals and access to powerful foreign officials.
In 2016, the fast-moving, glib-talking Zuberi — already on the radar for alleged criminal activity against a foreign consulate in Los Angeles — drew the focused attention of the FBI and IRS Criminal Investigation when he abruptly ditched Hillary Clinton, for whom he had raised millions over the years, and crossed the aisle to support Republican Donald Trump with a $900,000 donation.
Credible sources confirmed that Zuberi was at the headquarters of then-Democratic presidential candidate Clinton, awaiting victory celebrations.
However, as surveys proved wrong and results showed Trump winning the presidency, Zuberi called a close associate of the Republican candidate and committed a huge sum of money. To the utter surprise of his Democrat colleagues, he immediately defected to Trump’s camp.
In June 2020, he pleaded guilty in a federal investigation to making a $900,000 donation through his shell company to the Trump presidential inaugural committee. It was revealed that some of the funds Zuberi donated had come from other people, including foreign sources and fake as well as concealed donors.
Before being imprisoned for 12 years, the high-flying Zuberi worked with a number of foreign entities, including the Qatari government, soliciting huge fees while claiming he could use his political contacts to lobby on their behalf.
Zuberi became close to Richard Olson, who at the time was considered close to then-President Barack Obama and was appointed US Ambassador to Pakistan (2012–2015) and US Ambassador to the UAE (2008–2011).
In 2016, after retiring from government service, Olson created an entity called Medicine Bear International Consulting LLC.
Olson was later criminally charged for his alleged role in an undisclosed lobbying campaign for the Qatari government while serving as a foreign service officer. He was also accused of failing to disclose a trip to London undertaken with, and paid for by, Zuberi. Olson pleaded guilty on June 3, 2022.
In court papers, Zuberi’s name was not revealed. However, it was stated that a naturalised US citizen born in Pakistan met Olson in Islamabad. This meeting took place in March 2013, when Olson was serving as ambassador.
From March 2013 through November 2016, this Pakistani American solicited Olson’s advice and assistance in his capacity as ambassador with respect to a variety of business matters. He also used Olson to complain against a Pakistani diplomat Zuberi was attempting to remove in Los Angeles in 2015.
The Pakistani diplomat formally complained to the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) and the State Department that Zuberi was undermining his office and running a smear campaign after the diplomat refused to help Zuberi raise funds through the prosperous Pakistani-American community for Hillary Clinton.
Zuberi also attempted to bribe consulate staff to obtain information.
Towards the end of 2016, after Olson retired from government service, the Pakistani American agreed to retain Olson’s services for $20,000 per month, plus expenses. On or about December 2016, Zuberi sent Olson his first monthly cheque payable to “Medicine Bear” in the amount of $20,000.
Olson’s actions violated the “revolving door” prohibitions, which bar senior government officials from representing foreign entities during a one-year “cooling-off period” after retirement.
According to court papers, in January 2015, Olson—while still serving as US Ambassador to Pakistan—met the Pakistani American in Los Angeles and discussed the possibility of Olson working for Zuberi’s business associate, “Businessman 2”, a citizen of Bahrain.
A few days later, Olson agreed to meet Zuberi and Businessman 2 in London on January 31. Zuberi arranged first-class airfare from New Mexico to London, as well as a luxury hotel stay.
Within two months, Businessman 2’s company offered Olson a one-year contract after his retirement, including compensation of $300,000 per year. Despite being fully aware of the “revolving door” prohibitions, Olson illegally began working for Zuberi and his company in December 2016.
Zuberi also worked with the Qatari government, where Olson provided advice to facilitate lobbying US officials to establish US Customs preclearance facilities at Doha Airport. In an email to Zuberi, Olson advised that it would be important to secure the support of the US Ambassador to Qatar, writing: “I know her well but can’t do it… but (you) can charm her, she’s from LA.”
Zuberi sought Olson’s help again in June 2017, when the US Congress identified Qatar as providing financial aid to Hamas. In the following days, Olson, Zuberi, two other individuals, and a Qatari government official travelled to Doha.
They visited the royal palace to meet senior Qatari officials, though Zuberi was not permitted to attend the meetings. Upon returning to Washington, Zuberi and Olson met several US lawmakers to support Qatar.
Zuberi operated through a one-man shell company, Avenue Ventures LLC, falsely portraying it as a large venture capital firm. In reality, the company had one part-time employee, while his Chinese wife posed as his secretary.
He solicited foreign nationals and representatives of foreign governments, claiming he could use his political contacts in Washington, DC, to influence US foreign policy and create business opportunities.
Zuberi also worked with the government of Bahrain, attempting to lift sanctions on an indicted Bahraini citizen to allow him to develop a resort in the country. The scheme falsely created the impression that Avenue Ventures had made a major US investment in the project.
Citing this alleged investment, Zuberi lobbied members of Congress to apply political pressure on Bahrain to cease interference in the project, claiming it was adversely affecting him as a US investor. At Zuberi’s urging, at least a dozen congressmen sent letters to the Bahraini government requesting it stop interfering.
Zuberi undertook these efforts after charging a fee that violated the Foreign Agents Registration Act (FARA). Separately, he failed to report millions of dollars on his 2014 tax return that he had taken from the Sri Lankan government, claiming he could lobby on human rights issues.
Two American officials not authorised to speak on the record confirmed to Geo News that Zuberi, a Pakistani-American with an Indian mother, was behind those illegal payments.
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