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NSW Premier Chris Minns warns more changes to come after controversial gun control, anti-protest laws pass

Farid Farid and Dominic GianniniAAP
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NSW Premier Chris Minns speaks after pushing through legislation to cap gun ownership.
Camera IconNSW Premier Chris Minns speaks after pushing through legislation to cap gun ownership. Credit: DEAN LEWINS/AAPIMAGE

NSW Premier Chris Minns has sent a clear message that his Government is ready to confront hate speech and Islamist terrorism after controversial anti-protest laws and tightened gun rules were passed in a marathon parliamentary debate on Christmas Eve.

“It’s the first tranche but an important tranche of reforms in relation to protest legislation, extreme hate symbols in our communities and also the toughest gun restrictions of any jurisdiction in the country,” Mr Minns said at a press conference in Sydney on Wednesday.

“I know that not all Australians that live in NSW support these changes, but we have decided it’s the best way of ensuring we do everything possible to keep the people of NSW safe.”

Mr Minns succeeded in pushing through legislation to cap gun ownership, limit magazine capacity and tighten regulation around licences after the Bondi terrorist attack that left 15 people dead. However, he has warned that more reforms will follow.

“I want to make it clear that this isn’t the end of change,” he said.

“Sydney and NSW has changed forever as a result of that terrorist activity last Sunday and we know that it’s our responsibility to do everything we can to keep the people of NSW safe, and that means further change in the New Year.

“We’re currently looking at other areas of the law that are urgently required to confront hate speech, confront Islamist terrorism in our community and to send a clear message that if anyone’s hoping to divide Australians against Australians in Australia’s largest jurisdiction, then we’ll do everything we possibly can to confront it.”

Mr Minns thanked the NSW Leader of the Opposition, Kellie Sloane, for her support in passing the legislation.

“In the end, I think the Greens abstained. So the passage of this bill required cooperation from the Coalition and we got that, and I know that happened in a short space of time,” he said.

Premier Chris Minns and Opposition Leader Kellie Sloane joined forces to get the legislation passed. (Bianca De Marchi/AAP PHOTOS)
Camera IconPremier Chris Minns and Opposition Leader Kellie Sloane joined forces to get the legislation passed. (Bianca De Marchi/AAP PHOTOS) Credit: AAP

The marathon debate in the upper house ended at close to 3am on Wednesday after Parliament was urgently recalled following the mass shooting, Australia’s most deadly since the 1996 Port Arthur massacre.

Omnibus legislation spanning gun reform, protest restrictions and hate speech crackdowns passed 18 to eight votes after a two-day emergency session.

It is due to be rubber-stamped in the lower house later in the day.

The reforms were supported by the Liberals but not their junior Coalition partner, the Nationals, who opposed further firearm restrictions.

The laws passed with a last-minute amendment from the Greens to ban gun ownership for anyone investigated for terrorism-related offences, as well as members of their households.

Police Minister Yasmin Catley defended the rushed changes as being necessary.

“I have made no apology for being very swift and taking swift action here,” she told Sydney radio station 2GB on Wednesday.

“We do not want to see this (attack) again.”

Federal Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke said information sharing between national and state agencies about gun licence-holders was a crucial gap that needed to be plugged.

The slain 50-year-old gunman Sajid Akram legally purchased three guns in one day in 2023 after his 24-year-old son Naveed was investigated by ASIO in 2019.

“At the moment, there’s a system where the states have a limited sharing of actual convictions and a limited criminal intelligence,” Mr Burke said.

Federal Labor has pledged to make information-sharing with states more transparent by giving them “a warning light” about a person of interest who hasn’t committed a crime.

Gun-safety advocate Walter Mikac, whose wife and two young daughters were killed in the Port Arthur massacre, lauded the steps taken by the Minns government.

“Firearm ownership is a privilege, not a right,” the founding patron of the Alannah & Madeline Foundation said.

“Today’s decision reflects the community’s expectation that gun laws be rigorous, responsible and focused on public safety,” he said.

Police powers to prevent public gatherings after a terrorist event also passed but will face a legal challenge as opponents brand the changes draconian and an overreach.

Public assemblies can be restricted for up to 90 days following a declared terrorist incident.

Palestine Action Group, Jews Against the Occupation and Blak Caucus are planning to challenge the protest provisions in court but the premier said he was confident the laws would withstand the constitutional contest.

Multiple members of Labor’s backbench spoke out against the crackdown, including Anthony D’Adam and Stephen Lawrence, who called it disproportionate.

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