Politics
How the Bondi Beach mass shooting unfolded

SYDNEY: Australia is reckoning with one of its deadliest mass shootings after a father and son opened fire on crowds gathered for a Jewish festival at Bondi Beach.
Using witness testimony, amateur footage and official statements, AFP pieced together a timeline of Sunday’s attack that killed 15 people and wounded dozens.
Teenage Daesh supporter
Naveed Akram, 24, first caught the eye of Australia’s intelligence agency in 2019, when he was a teenager rubbing shoulders with supporters of the Daesh group in Sydney.

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said on Tuesday two of Naveed’s associates were later jailed but he was not considered a serious threat and largely fell off the radar.
That was until he joined his 50-year-old father Sajid Akram in a shooting spree aimed at Jewish crowds gathered to celebrate Hanukkah.
Philippines trip
Sajid and Naveed booked a trip to the southern Philippines in the weeks before the attack but the purpose of their visit remains unclear.

Australian broadcaster ABC said they went to run military drills with extremist organisations.
They had already been radicalised by an “Daesh ideology” by that point, authorities said.
Going fishing
Naveed told family before the shooting that he was taking his father on a fishing trip to Jervis Bay, about two hours’ drive south of Sydney.

He later told his mother stories about scuba diving, what he had been eating, and how he was wilting in the oppressive heat.
“Anyone would wish to have a son like my son… he’s a good boy,” his mother Verena told local media.
However, the pair were in reality staying at a humble Airbnb in Sydney’s outer suburbs, where authorities believe they plotted the attack.
Police later seized two guns from the property.
5.15pm
The pair left their hideout on Sunday afternoon bound for Bondi, according to CCTV footage obtained by the Sydney Morning Herald.

They drove through light Sunday traffic, and then parked their car and watched the busy beach below.
Donuts, ice cream
It was a typical sweltering summer Sunday afternoon at one of Australia’s most famous tourist hotspots.

Hundreds of worshippers joined the typically bustling crowds for an event to mark the start of Hanukkah, the Jewish festival of light.
“Let’s fill Bondi with joy and light,” read flyers promising free donuts, ice cream and hot chips.
There was also a petting zoo and face painting for children.
6.47pm
Hanukkah celebrations were in full swing when Sajid and Naveed, armed with long-barrelled guns, stepped out of their car and began shooting.

“For a split second I felt sorry for him because I thought he was tripping over and picking up crutches… but it’s a gun,” witness Bridget Sarks told the ABC.
It is unclear when exactly the first bullets flew but police said they received the first reports at around 6.47pm.
The festive atmosphere delayed the realisation that something terrible was unfolding.
Many witnesses thought the first cracks of gunfire were nothing more than celebratory fireworks.
Panic
Panic quickly set in.

Thousands of beachgoers dropped everything and fled for their lives as the gunshots rang out.
Police gave one of the earliest indications that something truly awful had happened just after 7pm.
“We are still asking people in the area to take shelter until we can determine what is happening,” they said on social media.
A team of off-duty lifeguards sprinted across the sand to drag children to safety.
Others much closer to the gunmen sought whatever cover they could find.
Heather Nolan said she and her family sheltered behind a wooden bench and that she put “my young kids behind the bench and put myself over them”.
Holocaust survivor Alex Kleytman was killed shielding his wife from the bullets.
Reuven Morrison, 62, died as he tried to throw a brick at one of the gunmen.
Ten-year-old Matilda, described by her family as a “happy” child, was shot in front of her younger sister and died in hospital.
Taking shelter
Churches, bars and restaurants threw their doors open to shelter the panicked crowds.

Frenchman Alban Baton, 23, hid for several hours with other customers in a grocery store cool room.
At around that time, Sajid Akram left a footbridge that offered a commanding view of the area and advanced towards the festival.
As Sajid fired into the crowd, fruit seller Ahmed Al Ahmed — who had been getting coffee with friends — approached him from behind and tackled him in a heroic act broadcast around the world.
Ahmed wrestled the gun away before pointing it at the assailant, who then backed away.
Ahmed was shot twice but it isn’t clear when or by whom.
Naveed remained on the bridge, firing round after round with cold determination.
Police arrive
Onlookers can be heard on video angrily demanding: “Where are the cops? Where are the cops, man?”

Armed police arrived about 10 minutes into the carnage, as Sajid rejoined his son on the footbridge.
Sajid was killed in an exchange of fire with police. Naveed kept shooting until he, too, was apparently shot and restrained.
Witnesses cheered as he fell to the ground.
Aftermath
Scuffles broke out as one member of the public kicked one of the gunmen, prostrate and surrounded by empty shotgun shells.

Sirens blared as CPR was frantically administered to the bodies strewn across the beachfront.
One witness described it as a “war zone”.
Bleeding victims were carried across the beach on surfboards used as makeshift stretchers.
Dozens of wounded were rushed to hospital.
At around 9.36pm, New South Wales Premier Chris Minns declared the mass shooting a terrorist attack.
Authorities confirmed next morning that 15 people were killed.
Sajid was also killed, and his son remains in a coma.
Politics
Iranian envoy reaffirms Pakistan’s ‘central role’ in ongoing talks with US

- Iranian envoy describes Islamabad’s efforts as “valuable”.
- Tehran transparent in its demands: Ambassador Moghadam.
- Says Washington must abandon its “aggressive posture”.
Iranian Ambassador to Pakistan Reza Amiri Moghadam on Sunday said Islamabad continues to serve as a central mediator in Iran’s negotiations with the United States.
“Pakistan remains a mediator, and no decision has been made to alter this,” the envoy said in an interview with an Iranian news agency, adding that progress in talks depends on a shift in Washington’s approach.
His comments came a day after US President Donald Trump cast doubt over the prospects of a new Iranian peace proposal.
Iran’s Tasnim and Fars news agencies reported on Saturday that Tehran submitted a 14-point proposal to mediator Islamabad.
Details included ending the conflict on all fronts and enacting a new framework for the crucial Strait of Hormuz, Tasnim said.
Ambassador Moghadam confirmed the same in today’s interview, saying Iran had conveyed a new negotiation plan to Washington via Pakistan.
He described Islamabad’s efforts in the negotiations process as “valuable” and central to the current diplomatic outreach.
Ambassador Moghadam maintained that Tehran was “transparent in its position and demands”, saying any meaningful progress was conditional on a change in US behaviour.
He stressed that Tehran would not compromise on its national interests or defence.
Talks between Iran and the US have remained stalled since the April 8 ceasefire, after a round of peace negotiations, held in Islamabad, failed to resolve the conflict.
The Pakistani government helped broker the ceasefire in the six-week conflict, which erupted after US and Israeli forces launched joint attacks on Iran on February 28.
The Middle East war has had a severe impact on the global economy after Iran effectively shut the Strait of Hormuz, a vital energy shipping route.
Tehran briefly reopened the strait for commercial traffic but closed it again, citing US ceasefire violations and the continued naval blockade of Iranian ports.
Meanwhile, the Iranian ambassador said that the international community was observing Tehran’s “clear and logical stance”, while criticising what he described as inconsistency in US policy.
Reaffirming Iran’s commitment to diplomacy, he said that Washington must abandon its “aggressive posture” and respect Iran’s rights for negotiations to move forward.
Ambassador Moghadam also highlighted growing political, economic and trade ties between Pakistan and Iran, noting that border crossings between the two nations played a crucial role in bilateral trade and regional connectivity.
Politics
Two women die on migrant boat seeking to reach UK

Two young women believed to be of Sudanese origin died Sunday while trying to reach Britain from northern France in a small boat, officials said.
The women, aged about 20, were aboard a small boat carrying 82 people, Christophe Marx, a regional government official, told reporters.
The boat set out to sea during the night from Saturday to Sunday, but “the engine wouldn’t start” and the boat began to drift, Marx said.
Seventeen people were rescued at sea and taken to the port of Boulogne-sur-Mer.
The boat with the remaining 65 people on board eventually ran aground on a beach near Neufchatel-Hardelot, about 12 kilometres (seven miles) south of Boulogne-sur-Mer, he said, adding that the victims had been found “dead inside the boat”.
Thirteen people with moderate injuries and three others with serious wounds, including burn victims, were taken to the hospital.
They were “being treated and will be interviewed by border police to determine who is responsible for this crossing”, Marx said.
He said an investigation would confirm the nationality of the victims. This is the third such tragedy in just over a month at the French-British border.
On April 1, two migrants died off the coast of Gravelines in northern France while attempting to reach the United Kingdom.
On April 9, two men and two women died, swept away by the currents.
In 2025, at least 29 migrants died at sea in the region, according to an AFP tally based on official French and British sources.
Britain and France last month signed a new three-year deal on security operations to stop the crossings.
France will increase the number of police and gendarmes patrolling the coast while the British government will increase its contribution to the cost.
According to French officials, the number of arrivals in Britain so far this year has been drastically cut from 2025.
Politics
Trump says US not likely to accept new Iran peace proposal

US President Donald Trump said Saturday he will review a new Iranian peace proposal, but cast doubt over its prospects as he left open the possibility of future attacks on Iran.
Negotiations between the two countries have been deadlocked since a ceasefire came into effect on April 8, with one round of peace talks to end the more than two-month war having failed in Pakistan.
The dour outlook came after Iran’s Tasnim and Fars news agencies reported Tehran submitted a 14-point proposal to mediator Islamabad. Details included ending the conflict on all fronts and enacting a new framework for the crucial Strait of Hormuz, Tasnim said.
“I will soon be reviewing the plan that Iran has just sent to us, but can’t imagine that it would be acceptable, in that they have not yet paid a big enough price for what they have done to Humanity and the World, over the last 47 years,” Trump said on his Truth Social platform.
In a brief interview with reporters in West Palm Beach, Florida, he declined to specify what could trigger new military action against the Islamic republic.
“If they misbehave, if they do something bad, but right now, we´ll see,” he said. “But it’s a possibility that could happen, certainly.”
On Saturday, Mohammad Jafar Asadi, a senior figure in the Iranian military’s central command, said “a renewed conflict between Iran and the United States is likely.”
“Evidence has shown that the United States is not committed to any promises or agreements,” he added, according to Fars news agency.
Deputy foreign minister Kazem Gharibabadi told diplomats in Tehran “the ball is in the United States’ court to choose the path of diplomacy or the continuation of a confrontational approach.”
Iran, he said, was “prepared for both paths.”
‘Hypocritical’
US news site Axios reported earlier in the week that Trump’s envoy Steve Witkoff had asked for Tehran’s nuclear program to be put back on the negotiating table.
Iran’s mission to the UN pointed to the massive US nuclear arsenal, accusing Washington on Saturday of “hypocritical behavior” towards Iran’s own atomic ambitions.
There was no legal “restriction on the level of uranium enrichment, so long as it is conducted under the IAEA’s supervision, as was the case with Iran,” it said, using the abbreviation for the UN nuclear watchdog.
Iran has maintained a stranglehold on the Strait of Hormuz since the war began, choking off major flows of oil, gas and fertiliser to the world economy, while the United States has imposed a counter-blockade on Iranian ports.
Oil prices are about 50 percent above pre-war levels.
The vice speaker of Iran’s parliament, Ali Nikzad, said that under draft legislation being considered for managing the waterway, 30 percent of tolls collected would go towards military infrastructure, with the rest earmarked for “economic development.”
“Managing the Strait of Hormuz is more important than acquiring nuclear weapons,” he said.
Fighting meanwhile continued Saturday in Lebanon, where Israel has carried out deadly strikes despite a separate truce with the Iran-backed armed group Hezbollah.
The Israeli military said it had struck dozens of Hezbollah targets across southern Lebanon following evacuation warnings for nine villages.
Lebanon’s state-run National News Agency reported three deaths in the attacks.
Hezbollah, for its part, claimed several attacks targeting Israeli troops.
The Israeli strikes included one in the village of Yaroun on what its military called a “religious building,” which was damaged.
The French Catholic charity L’Oeuvre d’Orient said the troops had “destroyed” a convent belonging to the Salvatorian Sisters, a Greek-Catholic religious order with which the charity is affiliated.
Iran’s economic toll
In Washington, lawmakers were wrestling over whether Trump had breached a deadline to seek congressional approval for the war.
Administration officials argue the ceasefire paused a 60-day clock, after which congressional authorisation would be required — a claim disputed by opposition Democrats.
In Iran, the war’s economic toll is deepening, with oil exports crimped and inflation surging past 50 percent.
“Everyone is trying to endure it, but… they are falling apart,” 40-year-old Amir, a Tehran resident, told an AFP reporter based outside the country.
“We still have not seen much of the economic effects because everyone had a bit of savings. They had some gold and dollars for a rainy day. When they run out, things will change.”
-
Tech6 days agoA Brain Implant for Depression Is About to Be Tested in Humans
-
Business6 days ago‘I had £20,000 stolen and had to fight a 13-month fraud reporting rule to get it back’
-
Tech6 days agoAlmost 90% of women leave tech industry within 10 years | Computer Weekly
-
Tech5 days agoThis Ambitious Laptop Doesn’t Leave Much Room for Your Hands
-
Business1 week agoPakistan’s oil market is fuelling the crisis | The Express Tribune
-
Entertainment6 days agoMelania Trump says ABC should ‘take a stand’ on late-night host Kimmel
-
Sports5 days agoPro wrestling star Steph De Lander reveals how colleague’s advice helped lead her to title triumph at ACW
-
Business6 days agoAnta: The Chinese sports brand taking on Nike and Adidas
