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Australian police link stash of explosives and list of Jewish targets to an antisemitic plot

New South Wales Police Deputy Commissioner David Hudson speaks in Sydney.
New South Wales Police Deputy Commissioner David Hudson speaks in Sydney, Wednesday, about the discovery of explosives stashed on Sydney’s outskirts suspected to have been intended to escalate a campaign of antisemitic arson and graffiti crimes.
(Steven Saphore / Associated Press)

Australian police believe explosives found on Sydney’s outskirts were evidence of a deadly escalation in a campaign of antisemitic arson and graffiti crimes that has been waged in major cities for months, officials said Wednesday.

Police found a list of Jewish targets together with a cache of Powergel, an explosive used in the mining industry, in a trailer in the outer suburb of Dural on Jan. 19, New South Wales state Deputy Police Commissioner David Hudson said.

Hudson said there were enough explosives to make a bomb with a blast zone of around 130 feet.

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“This is certainly an escalation,” Hudson told reporters, referring to a recent series of antisemitic crimes in Sydney, where businesses and cars have been torched and buildings graffitied. “The use of explosives ... have the potential to cause a great deal of damage.”

In response to rising antisemitism, an Australian state government has proposed new restrictions on protests, including a ban on demonstrations at places of worship.

He said several suspects had been arrested who were not directly related to the explosives.

He declined to identify the potential Jewish targets.

“I don’t think it’s appropriate to nominate the targets. I can indicate that the Jewish community will be made aware,” Hudson said.

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Israel’s Foreign Minister Gideon Saar called the attempted attack “intolerable” in a post to X, formerly known as Twitter. “The epidemic of antisemitism is spreading in Australia almost unchecked,” he wrote. “We expect the Australian government to do more to stop this disease!”

The Australian government says will outlaw the malicious release online of personal or identifying information without the subject’s permission. The move comes after pro-Palestinian activists published personal details about hundreds of Jewish people.

Since the Israel-Hamas war began in 2023, targeted arson and graffiti attacks have soared in Australia’s largest cities, Sydney and Melbourne, which are home to 85% of the country’s Jewish population.

A worshiper suffered burn injuries in a fire that was set at a Melbourne synagogue in December. The attack is being investigated by a joint counterterrorism team involving federal and state law enforcement authorities.

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New South Wales Premier Chris Minns said counterterrorism authorities were also investigating the explosives discovery.

“This is the discovery of a potential mass casualty event. There’s only one way of calling it out and that is terrorism. That’s what we’re very worried about,” Minns said. “This would strike terror into the community, particularly the Jewish community, and it must be met with the full resources of the government.”

McGuirk writes for the Associated Press.

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