Australia’s most prominent Anglo-Celtic advocacy group has called for the firing of all political figures responsible for allowing one of the Bondi terrorists into the country.
Pakistani immigrant gunman Sajid Akram, 50, was shot dead during the Sunday evening attack on a Jewish event by the famous Sydney beach, and his son Naveed, 24, who was investigated by ASIO over links to Islamic State, is in a critical condition. At least 16 people were killed in the massacre and another 40 injured, including two police officers.
The British Australia Community (BAC) on Monday called for all “responsible elites”, including Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, to resign or be fired, and for action to be taken against groups and individuals who have pushed for mass immigration and multiculturalism.
Foreign conflicts are being waged on our shores, and Australians are caught in the crossfire. You can have freedom, cohesion, stability, or the inevitable effects of mass immigration. The attacks in Bondi are one of many, and a sign of more to come. Our politicians have made… pic.twitter.com/7wJWWIrhJZ
— British Australian Community (@Brit_Aus_Com) December 14, 2025
British Australian Community President Harry Richardson said the Akrams would never have been able to carry out the “murder of innocents” if the White Australia Policy had not been undemocratically dismantled by political elites.
“The Australian people, and now the Jewish community in particular, are paying the tragic but predictable cost of runaway diversity ushered in by the tyrannical multicultural regime,” Mr Richardson said.
He said the BAC therefore called for the resignation or firing of the Prime Minister, Immigration Minister Tony Burke, the PM and immigration minister who let Sajid into Australia, NSW Premier Chris Minns, senior public servants, and top security agency officials who “failed to advise or investigate the dangers posed by open borders immigration and antiwhite multiculturalism”.
Mr Richardson also called for a high level inquiry into “the origins and culpability of individuals and organisations in promoting indiscriminate mass migration and antiwhite multiculturalism, including media companies and senior journalists that helped suppress research and free speech on the subject”.
The BAC’s statement came after both Mr Albanese and Mr Minns, who are in favour of mass immigration and multiculturalism, both said Australia’s gun laws needed to be strengthened in response to the attack.
Header image: Left, right, Naveed and Sajid Akram (Sky News).
























