(Sean Dunlop’s post from ABC NEWS AUSTRALIA on 16 December 2025.)
Bondi
Beach shooting gunman Naveed Akram was follower of pro-Islamic State preacher
Wisam Haddad: At least one of the gunmen responsible for Sunday's terrorist
attack at Bondi Beach had longstanding links to Australia's pro-Islamic State
(IS) network, including to a notorious Sydney cleric, the ABC has found.
But
in the lead-up to the attack, Naveed Akram, 24, was not on a terrorism
watchlist, nor was his father Sajid Akram prevented from legally accessing
firearms before they opened fire on a Hanukkah celebration, killing 15 people.
Naveed Akram remains in hospital under police guard after being wounded in a shootout with police in which his father was killed. Australia's domestic intelligence agency, ASIO, examined Naveed Akram in 2019 after uncovering his associations with a Sydney-based IS cell, the ABC reported on Monday.
Counterterrorism officials, speaking on condition of anonymity, have revealed the investigation also identified his links to Wisam Haddad, a cleric whose influence has loomed over multiple generations of Australian jihadists. Prime Minister Anthony Albanese told the 7.30 program on Monday night that ASIO found "no evidence" during its six-month investigation that either the father or son had been radicalised.
Wisam
Hadad in Islamic garb with a beard stands in Sydney's CBD looking at the camera
with a serious expression. Wisam Haddad has been closely watched by ASIO for
most of his adult life, but he has never been charged with a terrorism offence.
Mr
Haddad has never been charged with a terrorism offence, despite longstanding
ties to Australian terrorists and foreign jihadist leaders. A Four Corners
investigation earlier this year identified him as a spiritual leader of
Australia's pro-IS network.
A former ASIO undercover agent, codenamed Marcus, told the program he repeatedly warned the agency that the preacher was indoctrinating young people at his Bankstown prayer centre, Al Madina Dawah Centre. The former ASIO spy told Four Corners how he posed as a radical imam to infiltrate Wisam Haddad's network.
Through
a lawyer, Mr Haddad said he "vehemently denies any knowledge of or
involvement in the shootings that took place at Bondi Beach". Mr Haddad
has become notorious for violent antisemitic lectures, including lectures
quoting religious texts about the killing of Jews.
In
July, the Federal Court found he had breached the Racial Discrimination Act
over antisemitic lectures delivered at his prayer centre, Al Madina Dawah
Centre. Senior officials, speaking on condition of anonymity, said Naveed Akram
was a worshipper at Al Madina Dawah Centre and acted as a street preacher for
Mr Haddad's Dawah Van organisation.
The
Dawah Van lost its charity status in June after Four Corners revealed it was
radicalising young Australians on Sydney's streets while receiving government
tax concessions. The ABC has uncovered videos showing Naveed Akram
proselytising with a related Street Dawah group in mid-2019, when he was 17.
In
one, he tells schoolboys that "the law of Allah … is more important than
anything else you have to do — work, school … I can't stress it enough". In
another, he says God will reward actions taken "in his cause".
Muslim
community leaders stress that those comments were far from radical. But weeks
later, police raided an IS cell involving members of that same Street Dawah
network. Among those arrested was Isaac El Matari, an associate of Naveed
Akram, who was later jailed for seven years for declaring himself the
Australian commander of IS and plotting terrorist attacks.
Isaac El Matari was jailed in 2021 after pleading guilty to preparing a terrorist attack. ASIO began its investigation into Naveed Akram months later, in October 2019, according to Mr Albanese. Counterterrorism officials have told the ABC the agency was also concerned about Naveed Akram's association with an IS youth recruiter, Youssef Uweinat. Uweinat was later jailed for nearly four years for encouraging Australian minors to launch attacks while acting as a youth leader at Mr Haddad's prayer centre and a street preacher alongside Naveed Akram.
Youssef
Uweinat served nearly four years in prison for grooming and encouraging boys to
launch attacks. After his release, he
re-emerged publicly in August, when he was photographed waving a black flag
associated with jihadist groups at an anti-Gaza war protest on the Sydney
Harbour Bridge.
The extent of Naveed Akram's extremist associations has raised questions about how his father was permitted to keep his firearms licence. "That is a failure of the system," said John Coyne, a former Australian Federal Police intelligence coordinator and now director of national security programs at the Australian Strategic Policy Institute.
"We
need a royal commission — not just into what occurred at Bondi and in the
lead-up, but to look at the events of the last 18 months — the increased
antisemitism, the hate speech, the ideologically-driven crimes that have been
excused as freedom of expression."



