“The targeting of Australians based on their religious beliefs is not only an attack on them, but it’s an attack on our core values,” Albanese said.

“We must stamp out the hate, fear and prejudice that drives Islamophobia and division in our society.”

Albanese repeated his previous insistence that he would only pursue changes to federal anti-discrimination legislation if there was bipartisan support.

“I certainly support religious discrimination legislation, but I don’t support starting a debate that leads to rancour,” he said.

Federal legislation currently bans discrimination based on race, sex and age, but not on the basis of religion.

Attempts by the Morrison and Albanese governments to legislate to outlaw religious discrimination flamed out after becoming ensnared in a debate about how to protect LGBTQ students at religious schools against discrimination based on their sexual or gender identity.

Malik said Islamophobic incidents had skyrocketed since Hamas’s October 7 attacks in Israel, including the planting of fake bombs outside of mosques.

“Muslim women in particular … are physically assaulted, spat [on] or shoved or subjected to threats simply for wearing a headscarf,” he said.

His report calls for a commission of inquiry into anti-Palestinian and anti-Arab racism, saying this was a separate but related issue to Islamophobia that was being compounded by what the community saw as a lack of “moral action” from the government.

“I urge the Australian government to take a clear and public stand against the dehumanisation, hate, racism, and silencing directed at Palestinian and Arab Australian, as well as their supporters,” he said.

The Albanese government has moved to recognise a Palestinian state and repeatedly condemned Israel’s conduct in Gaza, while supporting the country’s right to defend itself against terrorist group Hamas.

Malik’s report calls for federal parliament “to develop behavioural codes of conduct for all Australian parliamentarians and staff to take a zero-tolerance approach to racism, with appropriate sanctions”.

Politicians and staffers would be given mandatory annual training in “how Islamophobia manifests in society, impacts its victims and undermines social cohesion”.

Alaa El Zokm, imam of the Elsedeaq mosque in Melbourne, said Muslim women had suffered particularly intense Islamophobia.Credit: Justin McManus

The code of conduct would “introduce clear contingencies for responses to parliamentarians who engage in hate speech or behaviour”, including formal reprimands and temporary suspension from the party room.

A federal judge found One Nation leader Pauline Hanson racially discriminated against Greens Senator Mehreen Faruqi in 2022 when she tweeted the Greens senator should “pack your bags and piss off back to Pakistan”. Hanson is appealing and argues the ruling violates her free speech.

Bilal Rauf, spokesman for the Australian National Imams Council, said the group hoped the government would act swiftly to implement the report’s recommendations, especially federal protection against religious discrimination.

Rauf praised the report for highlighting “the harsh reality of a prejudice that remains all too prevalent, while also exposing the persistent failure to address it”.

Alaa El Zokm, imam at the Elsedeaq mosque in Melbourne’s north, said he had been forced to increase security at Friday prayers after Islamophobic graffiti was sprayed on the building.

He said rising rates of Islamophobia had made some women and children in his community fearful of being in public alone.“Some of the families, all their children … have to be accompanied by the parents when they go [out], because any bad incident could happen to them, and they share that with us as well,” said El Zokm.

He said he hoped the report would “highlight that Islamophobia is not an isolated experience but a widespread challenge that has real consequences on individuals, families and communities.”

Cut through the noise of federal politics with news, views and expert analysis. Subscribers can sign up to our weekly Inside Politics newsletter.

Share.
Leave A Reply

Exit mobile version