Blind faith cannot justify attacks on police and paramedics

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Editorial

Blind faith cannot justify attacks on police and paramedics

The second violent attack to rattle our city in as many days – the knifing and ensuing riot at a western Sydney church – has cast a blasphemous pall over something once thought inviolable and emphasised the need for community unity at this dangerous time.

Chris Minns speaks outside Surry Hills Police Centre on Tuesday.

Chris Minns speaks outside Surry Hills Police Centre on Tuesday.Credit: Louise Kennerley

As if the latest tragic incident were not enough, it was fanned into a conflagration when the knifing was live-streamed from the church. Not only did it traumatise parishioners watching in person or at home, but just as mobile phones summoned so-called patriots during the 2005 Cronulla riot, nearly two decades later, a crowd of several hundred descended on the church. Chaos resulted.

A 16-year-old was arrested over the stabbing of three people – including Sydney Bishop Mar Mari Emmanuel, a priest and a parishioner – at the Assyrian Orthodox Church, Christ The Good Shepherd Church, in the suburb of Wakeley. Two officers were subsequently injured after the crowd hurled bricks and concrete at equipment and smashed 20 police cars. Paramedics tended to some 30 injured. Reprehensibly, six of them remained holed up inside the church for hours for fear of rioters.

Unthinkably, the rioters turned on police and paramedics just after Saturday’s Bondi Junction mass stabbings forcefully reminded the people of NSW of the debt owed to selfless emergency personnel. One moment, NSW Police Inspector Amy Scott heroically stopped a killer in his tracks in the mall. Barely 48 hours later, religious rivals cowardly attacked police who were trying to keep calm at the church.

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NSW Police Commissioner Karen Webb has declared the church incident a terrorist incident, seemingly based on comments made by the attacker in the immediate aftermath about the prophet Muhammad. “We’ve assessed it based on intelligence received, based on the actions of the individual, based on what he said when he entered the church and the intimidation he caused to both the parishioners and those watching online,” she said.

NSW legislation defines terrorism as, among other things, an act committed intended to advance a political, religious or ideological cause and an act designed to intimidate the public or a section of the public. The declaration allows authorities greater power to investigate with the NSW joint counterterrorism team comprising the AFP, ASIO and NSW Police.

The attack was horrific. And it will indeed meet the threshold of being a terrorist incident. But the declaration is a serious matter and the Herald calls on state and federal agencies and political leaders to offer more information on the factors behind the decision and how it was so quickly made. Equally, the NSW government needs to answer questions about the attacker’s previous offending involving knives and how he came to be granted a good behaviour bond.

For his part, NSW Premier Chris Minns says the declaration was needed to give police more investigative powers. “The designation is not a performative gesture, it’s not designed to go on a media release, we’re not trying to judge one crime over another with a particular designation,” he said.

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Amid heightened tensions, Minns has also warned the public against any retaliatory violence. “Sydney and New South Wales is on edge, and there’s understandable community anxiety at the moment,” he said. “You will be met by the full force of the law if there’s any attempt for tit-for-tat violence in Sydney over the coming days.”

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Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said there was no place for violence in a peace-loving nation and rejected the idea that events at the Good Shepherd Church were indicative of a tear in Australia’s multicultural fabric.

The Herald applauds Albanese and Minns for their admirable commonsense, calm and steady responses to both the Bondi Junction attack and the Wakeley church incident.

We can only assume that many of the people at the church on Monday night belong to communities who left their homelands for a new start. Past hatreds cannot be part of their new lives. The attacks on the police can in no way be justified. They were completely outrageous. Anyone throwing projectiles at emergency personnel should be prosecuted.

People of faith would never participate in such acts of violence, but the mad actions of a few have forced a tinderbox situation on Sydney. Extra security is being imposed on shopping malls, churches and mosques. It is clear that not only is community unity essential, but we must all work towards not making the situation any worse.

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