Shooters Sajid-Naveed are Pak-origin father-son duo

16 Dec 2025 10:52:57

Shooters Sajid-Naveed are Pak-origin father-son duo 
 
SYDNEY :
 
THE men behind the Sydney Bondi Beach shooting that claimed 15 innocent lives have been identified as a father-son duo originally from Pakistan’s Lahore, police said on Monday. One of the gunmen, 50-year-old Sajid Akram, was fatally shot by police during the attack, while the second shooter, his 24-year-old son Naveed Akram, was wounded and is currently undergoing treatment at a hospital, New South Wales Police Commissioner Mal Lanyon confirmed.
 
According to police, the father and son opened fire on Sunday evening at the ‘Chanukah by the Sea’ event, which was organised to celebrate the first day of the Jewish festival. The attack resulted in the deaths of 16 people, including the gunman Sajid. Police said the youngest victim was a 10-year-old girl who later died at a children’s hospital, while the oldest victim was 87 years old. Investigators said the two men had earlier told family members that they were travelling to the South Coast for a fishing trip.
 
Instead, they allegedly carried out what has now been described as the deadliest mass shooting in Australia in nearly three decades, in a country known for its strict gun control laws. Authorities said Naveed Akram is an Australian-born citizen. His father, Sajid Akram, arrived in Australia in 1998 on a student visa, which was converted into a partner visa in 2001 and later into a resident return visa, according to Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke. Following the attack, heavily armed police conducted raids on Sunday night at the family’s home in Bonnyrigg in south-west Sydney, as well as at an Airbnb property in Campsie, where the two men had been staying.
 
Police also located a vehicle on Campbell Parade in Bondi that contained several improvised explosive devices. “A rescue bomb disposal unit is there at the moment, working on the vehicle,” Commissioner Lanyon said. Senior officials, speaking on condition of anonymity, said two IS flags were found inside the attackers’ car at Bondi Beach. One of the flags was visible in footage from the scene, placed on the bonnet of the vehicle, the report added. A senior JCTT official also said that Australia’s domestic intelligence agency ASIO had taken an interest in Naveed Akram around six years ago, after police disrupted plans for an IS-inspired terrorist attack.
 
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese confirmed that Naveed Akram first came to ASIO’s attention in October 2019. He was investigated for about six months, but authorities later assessed that he did not pose an ongoing threat. According to officials, Naveed Akram had close links with Matari, who is currently serving a seven-year prison sentence for planning an IS insurgency as the self-declared Australian commander of the terror group. Matari was part of an IS cell that included several other Sydney-based men who have since been convicted of terrorism-related offences. Sources with close knowledge of the investigation said these individuals were also closely associated with Naveed Akram.
 
 
 
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