Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

Second Australian nurse charged for threatening to kill Israelis in viral clip

Ahmad Rashad Nadir, 27, was charged with using a communication system to threaten, menace or harass, and with possessing a prohibited drug, police said.

Australian Antisemitism
Ahmad Rashad Nadir and Sarah Abu Lebdeh speak with an Israeli online from their workplace in Sydney, Australia, February 2025. Credit: Courtesy of Max Veifer.

A second Australian nurse has been charged for threatening to kill Israeli patients, Australian police said Wednesday.

The news comes amid a surge of antisemitic attacks in Australia over the last several months in which synagogues were torched and vandalized, a Jewish day care center attacked and Jewish homes and vehicles defaced.

Ahmad Rashad Nadir, 27, was arrested on Tuesday and charged with using a communication system to threaten, menace or harass, and with possessing a prohibited drug, police said.

Last week, police charged another other nurse at the southwest Sydney hospital—26-year-old Sarah Abu Lebdeh—with threatening violence to a group.

The threats were made during a video chat with an Israeli social media influencer last month.

Both nurses were released on bail and are due back in court on March 19. They were suspended from their jobs last month.

Last month, Australia’s foremost Muslim groups defended the nurses from what it called the “hypocrisy” of their critics. A prominent opposition politician called for defunding the Muslims groups that had defended the pair.

Jewish community leaders in Australia have attributed the sharp rise in antisemitic incidents triggered by Israel’s 15-month war with Hamas in Gaza to inaction or hostility on the part of Australia’s Labor-led government.

See more from JNS Staff
Four Republicans joined with nearly every Democrat to direct U.S. President Donald Trump to remove American military forces from the conflict with Iran in a non-binding resolution.
“Despite his statements, it is not Israel, America or the Republican Party that has changed but Carlson himself,” Rabbi Yaakov Menken, executive vice president of the Coalition for Jewish Values, told JNS.
“Antisemitic language does not become acceptable simply because it appears within boycott messaging or political advocacy,” tech nonprofit CyberWell stated.
Eric Dinowitz and Inna Vernikov, co-chairs of the New York City Council’s bipartisan task force on Jew-hatred, both decried the way Rep. Dan Goldman was treated.
According to the Pew Research Center, 64% of religiously unaffiliated people who participated in a recent study favored student-led group prayer in public schools.
The Education and Workforce Committee will mark up 11 bills, including measures that would require institutions receiving federal funds to strengthen responses to antisemitism complaints.
Benny Gantz, JNS editor-in-chief Jonathan S. Tobin, Gilad Erdan, Mosab Hassan Yousef, Nissim Black and leading voices in security, diplomacy, media, law and Jewish communal affairs headline the summit’s third day in Jerusalem.