Published: 10:26, December 19, 2025 | Updated: 15:17, December 19, 2025
Australia plans gun buyback over Bondi Beach massacre
By Reuters
Australia's flag flies at half-mast at the Bondi Surf Bathers Life Saving Club near the promenade of Bondi Beach, where mourners have left floral tributes to honor victims of the shooting that took place there on Dec 14, in Sydney on Dec 18, 2025. (PHOTO / AFP)

SYDNEY - Australia will launch a national gun buyback scheme following the mass shooting in Sydney, Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said on Friday, as hundreds of surfers and swimmers paddled out at Bondi Beach to honor victims.

The buyback would be similar to gun reforms introduced soon after the massacre in 1996 in Tasmania's Port Arthur after a lone gunman killed 35 people, which prompted authorities to implement some of the world's toughest gun laws.

"Australia's gun laws were last substantially reformed in the wake of the Port Arthur tragedy. The terrible events at Bondi show we need to get more guns off our streets," Albanese said during a media briefing.

Fifteen people were killed and dozens wounded on Sunday in Bondi after two gunmen opened fire at people celebrating Hanukkah, the Jewish festival of lights.

In the shooting's aftermath, authorities have ramped up patrols and policing across the country in an effort to prevent further violence.

Both the federal government and the state government of New South Wales, where Sydney is located, have also pledged a raft of reforms, including tightening gun control laws.

Photo taken and released by Australian Prime Minister's Office on Dec 15, 2025 shows Australia's Prime Minister Anthony Albanese preparing to lay flowers at the Bondi Pavillion at Bondi Beach, the scene of a shooting where 15 people were killed. (PHOTO / AFP)

A 50-year-old gunman, who was killed at the scene, held a firearm licence and had six guns registered. If a man in Sydney's suburbs needs "six high-powered rifles and is able to get them under existing licensing schemes, then there's something wrong", Albanese said.

An estimated four million firearms are currently in the country. The government would work with states to target surplus, newly banned and illegal firearms, with the costs to be shared between the federal and state governments, he said.

READ MORE: PM: Australia to examine intelligence systems after Bondi Beach shooting

On the same day, New South Wales Premier Chris Minns announced the state government would be recalled next week to enact the "toughest gun law reforms in the country". Changes would include limiting firearms to four per person, restricting access to high-risk weapons and components, and tightening licensing requirements.

Following the Port Arthur massacre, Australia announced a gun buy-back scheme and secured the surrender of about 640,000 prohibited firearms nationwide. The total cost of compensation to owners was about A$304 million ($201 million).

Neighboring New Zealand announced sweeping gun reforms, including gun buyback schemes, after the Christchurch terror attack in 2019.

Seven men detained

Albanese, under pressure from critics who say his center-left government has not done enough to curb a surge in antisemitism since the start of the Gaza war, has said the government would also strengthen hate laws.

The government said it had consistently denounced antisemitism over the last two years and passed legislation to criminalize hate speech. It expelled the Iranian ambassador after accusing Tehran of directing two antisemitic arson attacks.

Authorities have said Sunday's shooting appears to have been inspired by the Islamic State.

Late on Thursday, police said they had intercepted two cars and detained seven men in Sydney's southwest after receiving information that "a violent act was possibly being planned".

Police on Friday said the men had been released from custody pending further investigations, with no immediate safety risk.

People visit a floral tribute outside the Bondi Pavilion following last Sunday's shooting at Bondi Beach, in Sydney, Dec 19, 2025. (PHOTO / AP)

New South Wales state Police Commissioner Mal Lanyon added that officials would continue to monitor the men, and police were not prepared to take any risks after suspecting the group was planning to visit Bondi.

There was no "confirmed link" between the detained men and the two Bondi gunmen, but they likely had similar ideologies, he added.

Islamic State called the Bondi mass shooting a "source of pride" in an article published on the group's Telegram channel, though it did not explicitly claim responsibility.

Police and additional security have been deployed at Sydney's Lakemba mosque, one of the largest in Australia, ahead of Friday prayers, Australian media reported.

Victims honored

Australia's Jewish community gathered at Sydney's Bondi Beach on Friday for prayers, while hundreds of swimmers and surfers formed a huge circle in the waters off the beach to honor victims.

Community leaders described the support as deeply moving amid heightened fears over a surge in antisemitic incidents.

"Over the past two years, there's been a lot of people who have been questioning whether we're still welcome here in Australia because we saw people calling for our death on the streets on a weekly basis," Rabbi Yosef Eichenblatt from Sydney's Central Synagogue told ABC News, after attending the paddle-out event.

"So it's been so heart-warming to see the outpouring of love and support. It's really so therapeutic."

Funerals for the victims also continued on Friday, with Boris and Sofia Gurman, a couple who were killed after trying to stop one of the gunmen, being laid to rest.

Meanwhile, Ahmed al Ahmed, the man credited with saving lives for wrestling a gun from one of the alleged gunmen during the attack, received a cheque for more than A$2.5 million ($1.65 million), after tens of thousands of people contributed to an online fundraiser.