"Representatives of Israel, Australia and the US condemned the deadly attack at Sydney's Bondi Beach, which killed 16 and wounded dozens, during a session of the UN General Assembly in New York on Monday. "The targeting of Jewish families celebrating at the beginning of Hanukkah is a terrorist act of evil antisemitism," noted the Israeli representative. He also accused various member nations of using 'long-standing items' in the UN to benefit from 'false narratives' and threaten Israel. "Words of hate become slogans of extremism and antisemitism, and slogans become actions that spread fear and ignite violence [...] We can't stay silent, and we will continue to respond whenever and wherever needed," the Israeli representative stressed. Australia's Deputy Representative to the UN, Beth Delaney, conveyed gratitude to member states for their condolences, while denouncing the incident as 'an attack on our way of life'. "Australia reaffirms our commitment to working with the UN and our international partners to eradicate antisemitism and all forms of racism, hatred, and intolerance around the world," she remarked. US Alternate Representative Dan Negrea underlined that the US would combat the 'global threat' of antisemitism 'without apology or hesitation' under the instruction of President Donald Trump. A mass shooting at Sydney's Bondi Beach on Sunday left 16 people dead, including one of the attackers, and over 40 others injured, officials said. Among the victims were Rabbi Eli Schlanger and a Holocaust survivor, reported community leaders. Police identified the attackers as father and son, Sajid Akram, 50, and Naveed Akram, 24. Sajid was shot dead by police, while Naveed was arrested and remains in custody. Authorities have classified the incident as a terrorist attack. Prime Minister Anthony Albanese condemned the shooting as "an act of pure evil, an act of antisemitism, an act of terrorism." A counter-terrorism investigation is underway, focusing on the attackers' movements, possible accomplices, and extremist links."