Australia will launch a national gun buyback scheme in the aftermath of a deadly attack on a Hanukkah celebration at Sydney's Bondi Beach last weekend, Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said on Friday.
Fifteen people died and dozens more were injured when gunmen opened fire on a crowd of more than 1,000 celebrating Hanukkah.
Mourners have gathered for the funeral of Rabbi Eli Schlanger, who was one of 15 people killed in Sunday's attack.
Among the new measures being considered are capping the number of firearms that can be owned by an individual, limiting the ...
The country has long looked warily at the cycle of gun violence in the United States, where meaningful changes in policy have been rare.
The Bondi Beach massacre, in which 15 unarmed civilians were shot dead, has exposed the loopholes in the country's strict gun ...
In Tasmania’s remote southwest, dry lightning storms are starting huge conflagrations across treeless plains. Could a return ...
Officials said at a news conference Tuesday that they were making their first comments about the suspects’ ideologies because ...
A massacre nearly 30 years ago led Australia to get tough on guns – now the Bondi shooting has reignited that debate ...
Tasmanian gun owners and control advocates have clashed over possible national firearms reforms following Sunday night’s ...
Sajid Akram — one of the two shooters who killed 15 people at Bondi Beach on Sunday evening — had a category AB firearm licence, and was legally in possession of six guns, according to the NSW police ...
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