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Group of young people arrested over arsons in Canterbury

Group of young people arrested over arsons in Canterbury

RNZ News2 days ago
Police were alerted to three separate reports of arson around Rolleston.
Photo:
RNZ / Marika Khabazi
Six young people have been arrested in connection to a string of arsons in the Canterbury town of Rolleston.
Police were alerted to three separate reports of arson around the Rolleston Reserve area over the past week.
The group were taken into custody following police enquiries and a review of CCTV footage.
They have all been referred to Youth Aid.
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Police say about 20 people were inside the synagogue when the attack happened but all escaped without injury. Photo: ABC / Rachel Clayton Police are investigating a third antisemitic incident that took place across Melbourne overnight. A synagogue in East Melbourne was first set alight about 8pm (10pm New Zealand time) on Friday, followed by a protest at a Jewish-owned restaurant in the CBD a few hours later. On Saturday afternoon, Victoria Police revealed details about another incident that occurred at a business in Greensborough about 4.30am (6.30am NZT). "It's understood that unknown offenders attended a business on Para Road and set fire to three cars," Acting Commander Zorka Dunstan said. "They also used spray paint on the cars and a building wall. One of the cars was destroyed, the other two were moderately damaged." 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He said some people remained to eat dinner when they began to notice some strange movements on their security camera feed. He said someone began ringing the doorbell and then smoke began entering the building. "I feel like if we didn't have a fire station on the corner and if we weren't as vigilant as we had been training ourselves to be, it could have been a lot worse," Rabbi Gutnick said. Rabbi Gutnick said he believed the CCTV footage showed the attack was "well prepared" and deliberate. "There's certainly kind of a pall or some type of darkness hovering at the moment and it's a bit uncomfortable, it's upsetting," he said. "But at the same time, it kind of makes a synagogue like ours, our work even more important - to be welcoming, to be a beacon." Jenny Segal, who was having dinner inside the synagogue when the fire broke out, said the incident was frightening. "It was a very, very big night, very scary, but everybody was safe. 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Federal Minister for Multicultural Affairs, Anne Aly, said she and Mr Bourke had spoken to Australia's Special Envoy to Combat Antisemitism, Jill Segal, about the need for broader education about the "insidious nature of antisemitism and the impact it has on Jewish Australians". Shadow Police Minister David Southwick is Jewish and his electorate includes a large section of Melbourne's Jewish community. He said the attacks must be treated as hate crimes. "We just cannot have a situation where the city of Melbourne is being hijacked by these activists and really want to play out what's happening in the Middle East thousands of miles away. "It has nothing to do with Melburnians, it has nothing to do with many Jews in Melbourne who just want to get on with their lives." He said the synagogue targeted by the arsonist was one of the oldest in Melbourne, dating back to the 1870s. Rabbi Gutnick said security may be tightened around the synagogue to make it harder to access the building. "But you also want the synagogue to be welcoming," he said. "We're part of a faith precinct - St Peter's, St Patrick's, the Lutheran church ... it's a beautiful space, it's peaceful, by and large, we all get along, we have a clergy meeting once a month ... it's a lovely part of town, you'd hate to think we'd turn it into Fort Knox." One of the leaders of a neighbouring church arrived at the scene this morning to support Rabbi Gutnick. Jewish Community Council of Victoria CEO Naomi Levin said she was heartened by the number of passers-by who stopped to offer support and sympathy to members of the congregation. "[Melbourne's] Lord Mayor Nick Reece was there, staff from the premier's office came down," she said. "It just showed that [the attackers] are outliers. These are extremists, this is not who we are, Australians are not violent or aggressive." Federal Opposition Leader Sussan Ley called the arson attack "horrifying". What happened in Melbourne last night was horrifying. A synagogue set alight while families gathered for Shabbat dinner. An Israeli restaurant stormed and terrorised by protesters chanting 'death to the IDF.' This is not protest. This is hate. And it has no place in Australia. Chair of the Anti-Defamation Commission, Dvir Abramovich, said the synagogue attack was barbaric and could have been fatal. "They came armed with hatred," Abramovich said. "We are not asking for sympathy. We want action. We want justice. We want protection." - ABC

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