“And what we’ve seen is them being targeted,” Albanese said.
“Now these people have a range of views about the Middle East. What they have in common,though,is the fact that they’re members of the Jewish community.
“And the idea that in Australia,someone should be targeted because of their religion,because of their faith – whether they be Jewish,or Muslim or Hindu or Catholic or Buddhist – is just completely unacceptable.
“And that’s why I’ve asked,as well,the Attorney-General to develop proposals to strengthen laws against hate speech,which we will be doing. This is not the Australia that we want to see.”
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Executive Council of Australian Jewry president Daniel Aghion welcomed the move and said the stronger law was needed to deal with doxxing.
“While existing laws outlaw the use of social media platforms to menace and threaten others,the doxxers themselves,who orchestrated a campaign of intimidation,violent threats and horrific abuse,cannot be allowed to get away with it,” he said.
“We have called for an end to the impunity and we are grateful that the government has listened.”
The federal plans leap ahead of state moves on hate speech after the controversy over a pro-Palestinian gathering at the Sydney Opera House last October and a decision by NSW Premier Chris Minns to seek an independent review of the hate speech provisions of state criminal law.
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The votes in parliament on the privacy safeguards and the hate-speech law will depend on the details of the two separate initiatives after years of dispute over the balance between the right to privacy,the protection from vilification and the right to free speech.
Section 18C of the Racial Discrimination Act makes it an offence under federal law for someone to “offend,insult,humiliate or intimidate” another person on the basis of their race or ethnic origin,butthe Liberal Party sought to scale back this protection a decade ago because it sought to champion free speech.
But Opposition Leader Peter Dutton signalled support for tougher federal laws last Friday when he expressed his concern at the doxxing during a visit to Melbourne.
“Frankly,if that is not something the police are looking at now,then I believe they should urgently look at it,” he said.
“If the laws need to be beefed up then they should,because it shames me to say that people of Jewish faith in our country at the moment,many of them living with great angst,and we’ve seen a situation where security has been bolstered at Jewish schools at synagogues,at supermarkets,that has no place in our country in the 21st century at all.”
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