Gulf Today

Crowds pay tributes to Sydney stabbing victims

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SYDNEY: Crowds gathered at Sydney’s iconic Bondi Beach on Sunday for a candleligh­t memorial to the six people killed by a knife-wielding assailant at a nearby shopping mall.

Many hundreds sat on the grass in a beachside park to grieve for the five women and a Pakistani male security guard who died in the April 13 attack at the Westfield Bondi Junction shopping complex.

The killings stunned many Australian­s who are largely unaccustom­ed to such violent crime.

“When I heard this I cried. Because it is new to us. We don’t have this happen often. It’s a shock,” said 56-year-old local cafe owner Daniela Pontidas.

“I know a lot of people that were impacted in some way,” she told reporters.

“I feel like this has burst Australia’s bubble a bit.”

Paul Inggall, 50, said he had been at Bondi Junction in the morning hours before the attack.

“These things don’t happen often in Australia but when they do I think they have a profound impact,” he told reporters.

“I think it really moves the community, so I want to be a part of it.”

The mentally ill knifeman, 40-year-old Joel Cauchi, was tracked down, shot and killed by police inspector Amy Scott, who attended the service.

As waves crashed into the beach at dusk, a choir sang the hymn “Keep Your Loving Arms Around Me.”

An Indigenous didgeridoo was played as people lit candles in the breezy evening.

“Bondi is tough and this is a strong community, and we will get through this,” said New South Wales Premier Chris Minns.

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese offered the condolence­s of the nation for the six lives “snatched away on that hardest of Saturday afternoons.”

“We mourn for all the joy they should have known,” he said.

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