Angry Aussies have started hanging signs from highway overpasses blasting Prime Minister Anthony Albanese over the Islamic terrorist Bondi massacre.
Photos and videos obtained by Noticer News show two signs and an Australian flag displayed above a highway near Rosebud, Victoria, following the terror attack carried out by Islamic State-linked Naveed and Sajid Akram in Sydney on Sunday that left 16 dead and 40 injured.
One of the signs said “Bloody hands Albo” with red handprints, and the other read “Asshole Liar Betray Overpaid” with the first letters spelling “Albo” in red, and was hung next to an Australian flag.
Video: pic.twitter.com/Oe3FXsYgjf
— The Noticer (@NoticerNews) December 16, 2025
Immigration Minister Tony Burke was also heckled with the phrase “blood on your hands” after turning up to a vigil for the victims of the attack, following fury over his decisions to help bring ISIS brides back to Australia and grants thousands of visas to Palestinians.
The displays of anger come after Mr Albanese was heavily criticised both in Australia and around the world for repeatedly warning about “right-wing extremism” when asked about the Bondi attack.
At a press conference on Monday he responded to a question about ASIO advice by bringing up the “the rise of right-wing extremist groups”, and then in an interview with ABC’s 730 that evening again deflected to the “far-right” while saying gun laws needed to be “updated for the change in threat”.
“We live in a more dangerous world in 2025, the threat of anti-Semitism, as we have seen, is very real, threats of other occurrences such as the rise of the far-right, which had also been identified, of course, by [ASIO boss] Mike Burgess, also a threat as well,” he said.
But during his series of press conferences, interviews and statements on Sunday and Monday, the Prime Minister did not mention the words “Islam” or “Muslim” once, and referred to “Islamic State ideology” for the first time on Tuesday morning in an ABC Radio Sydney interview, although he again brought up “Nazis”.
“It would appear that this was motivated by Islamic State ideology,” he said.
“The ideology that has been around for more than a decade that led to this ideology of hate, and in this case, a preparedness to engage in mass murder. We are working as hard as we can.
“Anti-Semitism, tragically, has been around for a long period of time. We have been the first government to legislate for hate symbols, for Nazi symbols, for hate speech. We have established an envoy on anti-Semitism.”
Mr Albanese’s comments about the “far-right” came as he and NSW Premier Chris Minns focused on strengthening gun laws during the aftermath of the massacre, rather than on the terrorists and their religion or ideology.
Federal, state and territory governments then agreed on a major overhaul of Australia’s firearms legislation, including limiting the number of guns that can be owned by one person, and limiting open-ended licensing.
Header image: Left, right, signs on the highway (Noticer News).























