ShowBiz & Sports Lifestyle

Hot

Israel’s president mourns antisemitic massacre in Australia, where fury over Gaza still divides

- - Israel’s president mourns antisemitic massacre in Australia, where fury over Gaza still divides

Hilary Whiteman, Angus Watson, CNNFebruary 9, 2026 at 8:50 AM

3

People hold up placards during a protest against the visit of Israel's President Isaac Herzogin Sydney, Australia, on February 09, 2026. - Lisa Maree Williams/Getty Images

Israeli President Isaac Herzog received two very different receptions in Australia on Monday – a warm welcome by a government determined to show solidarity with its grieving Jewish community, and mass protests by activists who consider him a war criminal.

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese invited Herzog to visit as a gesture of unity with Jewish Australians after 15 people were killed at a Hanukkah festival near Sydney’s Bondi Beach – the worst terror attack committed in the country.

In the weeks after the December 14 attack, the government has repeatedly pushed the need for social cohesion. However, Albanese’s decision to invite Herzog – the head of state of a country accused of genocide in Gaza, a claim Israel’s government denies – has angered many Australians and even led to calls for the visitor’s arrest.

After touching down in Sydney on Monday, Herzog laid a wreath at Bondi Pavilion, near the site of the massacre, as across town lawyers for the Palestinian Action Group argued in court for their right to protest his visit within an area subject to new government restrictions.

Like many nations across the world, Australia has experienced sharp divisions over Israel’s war in Gaza that have spilled into protests – and as many as 30 are planned nationwide on Monday to mark Herzog’s visit.

Israeli President Isaac Herzog and his wife Michal arrive to lay a wreath for the victims of the December 14, 2025 gun attack at the Bondi Pavilion, in Sydney, on February 9, 2026. - David Gray/AFP/Getty Images

The largest will be outside Sydney Town Hall, where thousands of pro-Palestinian protesters gathered on Monday evening accompanied by a heavy police presence.

Major Jewish groups in Australia, including the Executive Council of Australian Jewry and the Australian Jewish Association, have welcomed Herzog’s visit and condemned the protests.

Bondi Beach massacre survivor, Yvonne, who declined to give her surname, said the Israeli president’s trip to Sydney gave her comfort. She survived the onslaught after sheltering under a picnic table with her 2-year-old son as gunmen fired on the crowd.

ā€œIt means we’re not alone. He’s come from the other side of the world,ā€ she said of Herzog. ā€œIt means wherever we are in the world, we are supported by Israel. It means a lot.ā€

What the UN commission said about Herzog

As Israel’s head of state, Herzog occupies a largely ceremonial role removed from the executive decision-making led by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, whose stated aim to destroy Hamas following the group’s October 7 massacre has resulted in the deaths of over 70,000 Palestinians, according to the Palestinian Ministry of Health.

The International Criminal Court issued arrest warrants for Netanyahu and former Defense Minister Yoav Gallant in 2024 for alleged war crimes and crimes against humanity. Then last September, an independent UN inquiry found Netanyahu and Gallant – as well as Herzog – had ā€œincited the commission of genocide.ā€

The inquiry commission pointed to comments Herzog made less than a week after Hamas militants killed and kidnapped hundreds of Israelis on October 7, 2023. Herzog said ā€œan entire nationā€ had been responsible for the Hamas attack.

His words ā€œmay reasonably be interpreted as incitement to the Israeli security forces personnel to target the Palestinians in Gaza as a group as being collectively culpable,ā€ the commission found.

A displaced Palestinian woman prepares food over a fire inside a makeshift shelter near Gaza Seaport in the western part of Gaza City on January 6, 2026. - Abood Abusalama/Getty Images

Smoke and flames rise after an Israeli attack on a three-story building in the Zeitoun neighborhood in Gaza City on Friday, February 6, 2026. - Ali Jadallah/Anadolu/Getty Images

After the report’s release, Herzog angrily dismissed it as suffering from a lack of legitimacy.

The president’s office has not responded to a CNN request for comment. But Herzog has previously rejected claims he blamed all Palestinian people for the attack.

One of the authors of the report, UN commissioner Chris Sidoti, a former Australian human rights commissioner, says the country has a legal and moral imperative to detain Herzog on arrival, though he doesn’t think it’ll happen.

ā€œI feel quite confident that he would not even be attempting this trip if he had not received assurances from the Australian government that he would not be arrested,ā€ he said. The Australian Federal Police (AFP) has confirmed that Herzog is protected by diplomatic immunity.

An Israeli official told CNN that Israel’s justice ministry had assured Herzog and his delegation there was no threat of arrest, partly because it was a state visit and also because no warrants existed for anyone in their party.

One of Herzog’s entourage, Doron Almog, chairman of the Jewish Agency, is also the subject of a formal complaint filed with the AFP by four legal groups including the Australian Centre for International Justice (ACIJ) and Palestinian human rights organization Al-Haq.

Almog, a former general in the Israel Defense Forces, reportedly canceled a planned trip to South Africa for fear he’d be arrested there by a country that took a genocide case against Israel to the International Court of Justice.

Unlike Herzog, Almog does not have diplomatic immunity, the lawyers said.

CNN has reached out to the Jewish Agency for comment.

ā€˜This does not make Jews safer’

In an interview with The Australian newspaper prior to his arrival, Herzog said he wanted to use the trip to confront ā€œlies and false informationā€ about Israel.

ā€œIt’s the time to get out of that brainwash campaign that has been going on within the Australian public for quite some time, both against the Jews and against Israelis.ā€

But not all Jewish groups in Australia welcomed the visit.

The Jewish Council of Australia, a progressive advocacy group, accused Albanese of using Jewish grief as a ā€œpolitical prop and diplomatic backdrop.ā€

Hosting Herzog ā€œrisks entrenching the dangerous and antisemitic conflation between Jewish identity and the actions of the Israeli state,ā€ Sarah Schwartz, the group’s executive officer, said in a statement. ā€œThis does not make Jews safer. It does the opposite.ā€

A full-page open letter signed by ā€œhundreds of Jewsā€ was published in two major Australian newspapers on Monday that said Herzog does not speak for them and is ā€œnot welcome.ā€

A woman pays her respects at Bondi Pavilion to victims of a shooting during a Jewish holiday celebration at Bondi Beach, in Sydney, Australia, December 15, 2025. - Hollie Adams/Reuters

Mourners gather by floral tributes at the Bondi Pavillion in memory of the victims of the shooting at Bondi Beach, in Sydney on December 15, 2025. - Saeed Khan/AFP/Getty Images

After the Bondi attacks, many in the Jewish community said Albanese had not done enough to stamp out antisemitism that had worsened since Israel sought to avenge Hamas’ murderous attack.

In the two years to September 2025, as Netanyahu’s government turned much of Gaza to rubble and the Palestinian death toll grew, Jewish groups recorded more than 3,700 ā€œanti-Jewish incidentsā€ in Australia, including arson attacks on synagogues, car fires, and antisemitic graffiti.

The shaken Jewish community was forced to increase its own security for fear that hatred could turn to bloodshed.

In the days after the Bondi Beach massacre – allegedly committed by a father and son who had embraced Islamic State ideology – the government announced sweeping new gun laws, tougher rules on hate speech, and stronger powers for the home affairs minister to cancel visas on character grounds.

As his political opponents demanded he recall parliament and hold a special federal investigation into the attacks, Albanese asked Australia’s governor-general to formally invite to Herzog to the country.

Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese speaks to members of the local Jewish community on December 10, 2024 in Melbourne, Australia. - Asanka Ratnayake/Getty Images

Just over a month later, police spent the weekend in talks with the Sydney-based Palestinian Action Group to try to convince protest leaders to accept a compromise protest location, away from the Town Hall.

Sidoti, the UN commissioner, said the Australian government had made a ā€œtragic mistakeā€ by inviting Herzog to the country at a time of deep division.

ā€œThis mistake should have been corrected weeks ago,ā€ he said. ā€œThis is a visit that will have serious consequences for social cohesion in Australia.ā€

For more CNN news and newsletters create an account at CNN.com

Original Article on Source

Source: ā€œAOL Breakingā€

We do not use cookies and do not collect personal data. Just news.