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  • Australian state to ban intifada chants after Bondi shooting

    Australian state to ban intifada chants after Bondi shooting


    EPA Close-up of Chris Minns wearing a blue shirt and tie at a press conference EPA

    Chris Minns, Premier of New South Wales, has pushed for tougher hate speech laws following the Bondi attacks

    The Australian state where the Bondi shooting occurred plans to ban the phrase “globalise the intifada” as part of a crackdown on “hateful” slogans.

    New South Wales (NSW) premier Chris Minns has also called for a Royal Commission into the Bondi attack, marking the deadliest shooting in Australia in nearly 30 years.

    Fifteen people were killed and dozens injured last Sunday when two gunmen, believed to have been motivated by “Islamic State ideology”, opened fire on a Jewish festival at the country’s most iconic beach.

    Australia’s state and federal governments have announced a raft of measures to counter extremism since the attack.

    Minns plans to recall the state parliament next week to pass through stricter hate speech and gun restrictions. Earlier this week, he also suggested he would tighten protest laws to scale back mass demonstrations to encourage “a summer of calm”.

    The premier confirmed he would seek to classify the chant “globalise the intifada” as hate speech.

    Two pro-Palestinian protesters were arrested on Wednesday for allegedly shouting slogans involving intifada at a demonstration in central London.

    The term intifada came into popular use during the Palestinian uprising against Israeli occupation of the West Bank and Gaza Strip in 1987.

    Some have described the term as a call for violence against Jewish people. Others have said it is a call for peaceful resistance to Israel’s occupation of the West Bank and actions in Gaza.

    Earlier this week, Minns, along with the NSW Opposition Leader Kellie Sloane, attended the funeral Matilda, 10, who was the youngest victim of the Bondi shooting. He read out a poem dedicated to the young girl at the event.

    Prime minister Anthony Albanese has announced a new gun buyback scheme to purchase surplus, newly banned and illegal firearms. Hundreds of thousands of guns will be collected and destroyed, the government predicts.

    Around 1,000 lifeguards staged a tribute on Saturday, lining up arm-to-arm facing the ocean, on the shorelines of Bondi beach. Surf lifesaving teams at other beaches around Australia were photographed performing a similar memorial.

    Through the week, Bondi’s surf volunteers have been commemorated as some of the heroes of the shooting. Lifeguard Jackson Doolan was photographed sprinting over from a neighbouring beach during the attack carrying a red medical supply bag.

    Hundreds of swimmers and surfers paddled out at Bondi beach yesterday to create a giant circle to pay tribute to the victims of the attack.

    On Sunday, Australia will hold a national day of reflection with the theme “light over darkness” marking precisely one week after the attack started with a minute’s silence at 6:47 pm (0747 GMT).

    Flags will fly at half-mast and Australians are being asked to light a candle in their windows to honour the victims.

    “Sixty seconds carved out from the noise of daily life, dedicated to 15 Australians who should be with us today,” prime minister Albanese told reporters Saturday.

    “It will be a moment of pause to reflect and affirm that hatred and violence will never define us as Australians.”

    Bondi’s attack was Australia’s worst mass shooting since Port Arthur in 1996, where 35 people were killed and prompted then-prime minister John Howard to introduce strict gun control measures.



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  • ISC Stormcast For Friday, December 19th, 2025 https://isc.sans.edu/podcastdetail/9746

    ISC Stormcast For Friday, December 19th, 2025 https://isc.sans.edu/podcastdetail/9746



    (c) SANS Internet Storm Center. https://isc.sans.edu Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial 3.0 United States License.



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  • Removed Ben & Jerry’s chair says Magnum aimed to ‘smear’ her

    Removed Ben & Jerry’s chair says Magnum aimed to ‘smear’ her


    The ousted chair of Ben & Jerry’s has accused the company which owns the brand of threatening to launch a public smear campaign against her.

    Anuradha Mittal, who chaired Ben & Jerry’s independent board for seven years, told the BBC that Magnum had threatened to publish “defamatory statements” about her if she did not step down from her role.

    It relates to an increasingly bitter dispute between the Vermont-based activist ice cream maker and its owner over the independence of the board and its freedom to pursue its social missions.

    Magnum said in its view Mittal “no longer met the criteria to serve” on the board, following an investigation it had commissioned by external advisors.

    In a statement on Monday, Magnum outlined changes to the way the board operates including a nine-year limit for people serving on it.

    As well as Mittal, who said she had received a letter telling her she had been removed from the board, two other board members will be required to leave as a result.

    It also said that an audit of the Ben & Jerry’s Foundation, a charitable organisation, had “identified a series of material deficiencies in financial controls, governance and other compliance policies, including conflicts of interest”.

    Speaking to the BBC’s World Business Report, Mittal said there had been an escalation of the friction between Ben & Jerry’s board and its owner, over the brand’s independence, social mission and integrity.

    “For several years now, we have been resisting their overreach, including their efforts to muzzle us from speaking out for human rights, for peace,” she said.

    The brand, which is also known for the playful puns in its flavour names, was owned by Unilever until earlier this month, when the household goods giant spun off its ice cream unit to create, Magnum Ice Cream Company.

    Ben & Jerry’s was sold to Unilever in 2000 in a deal which allowed it to retain an independent board and the right to make decisions about its social mission.

    This was a frequent source of friction while owned by Unilever.

    In 2021, Ben & Jerry’s refused to sell its products in areas occupied by Israel, resulting in its Israeli operation being sold by Unilever to a local licensee, and in October, Ben Cohen said it was prevented from launching an ice cream which expressed “solidarity with Palestine”.

    This row has now been inherited by Magnum, culminating in this week’s stand-off, and Mittal’s removal.

    “This October, Unilever-Magnum executives threatened me with defamatory statements in their forthcoming prospectus if I did not resign,” Mittal said.

    “At the same time, they offered me a prominent role in a multimillion dollar Unilever-funded non-profit if I gave in,” she added.

    She said she had turned down that “inappropriate” offer.

    Magnum is now the world’s largest ice cream maker, with its brands include Cornetto, Wall’s and Carte D’Or.

    Mittal, founder of the Oakland Institute, a human rights and development focused think tank in California, described Magnum’s approach as a “public smear campaign” and said the allegations were unfounded.

    One of the firm’s original founders Jerry Greenfield left the firm in September saying he felt its social mission was being stifled. The other, Ben Cohen, has also hit out at Magnum saying it was “not fit” to own the firm.

    In a statement a spokesperson for Magnum said the steps it had taken were aimed at strengthening corporate governance and to “reaffirm the responsibilities of the Board of Ben & Jerry’s”.

    “These actions aim to preserve and enhance the brand’s historical social mission and safeguard its essential integrity,” a spokesperson said.

    When Ben & Jerry’s was created in 1978 it made its mark selling flavours such as Cherry Garcia named after the guitarist from rock band Grateful Dead, Bohemian Raspberry, a play on the Queen track, and the now discontinued Vermonty Python.

    Magnum said in its statement: “We remain unequivocally committed to Ben & Jerry’s three-part mission – product, economic and social – and its progressive, non-partisan values.

    “Ben & Jerry’s continues to advocate for a range of causes and be a bold voice for social justice, as a glance at its social media channels demonstrates.”



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