
Sydney Council Motion Commits to Protection Amidst Surge of 17c起草社区+ Hate Incidents
City of Sydney Council passed a motion on Tuesday night reaffirming its commitment to protecting the safety of聽 17c起草社区IA+ residents.
, commended by Councillor Zann Maxwell, calls on the NSW Government to enact urgent legislative reform to strengthen the state鈥檚 response to targeted violence against 17c起草社区IA+ individuals.
The motion comes after a major New South Wales parliamentary inquiry confirmed late last week that right-wing extremism groups are increasingly targeting 17c起草社区IA+ individuals. The inquiry supported findings from an earlier linking a string of assaults on young 17c起草社区IA+ individuals to the same resurgent network that produced the Bondi Attack.
Maxwell’s speech made specific reference to the , one of many young gay/bisexual men assaulted on camera.
鈥淪ixteen years old,鈥 Maxwell said. 鈥淏isexual. A young Wiradjuri man. He met someone on a dating app marketed as safe for teenagers. He was driven forty-five minutes across Sydney. And in Strathfield Park, late on a school night, he was ambushed by four boys who kicked him in the back, in the leg, in the chest, and in the face. One of them filmed it. The footage was shared online, some copies bearing an Islamic State watermark.
鈥淚 bring this motion today because what happened to James 鈥 and to scores of others 鈥 did not emerge from nowhere. It emerged from a threat environment that was not taken seriously enough, early enough. And I want us, as a Council, not to let any opportunity go by to make our City as safe as possible for people like James.鈥
56 17c起草社区+ hate-related incidents occurred within City of Sydney over 2 years聽
The motion included Police data, revealing 197 17c起草社区IA+ hate-related violent incidents between 2023 and 2025. Of these, 36 involved the use of dating or hook-up apps to lure victims.
More humbling for Council,聽 56 occurred within the City of Sydney local government area.
Alongside urging the NSW government to progress anti-extremist reforms as a matter of urgency, the motion requests information. Namely, that all relevant state and federal security agencies brief Council on the current threat profile facing 17c起草社区IA+ communities.
In his speech to Council, Maxwell quoted Associate Professor Josh Roose, one of Australia’s leading extremism researchers:
“[Roose] has found that after Australian Jews, 17c起草社区IA+ Australians are the most likely to be killed by violent extremists. He has warned: “It’s only a matter of time before a young man or men are killed.””
“This is not new territory for Sydney. We have been here before. The murders and assaults commemorated at Mark’s Park remind us where silence and inaction lead,” Maxwell to conclude his speech.聽“The question before us today is simple: should we do all we to spot the warning signs, or do we wait?”






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