Social media platform X pledges to fight e-Safety commissioner over Western Sydney church stabbing posts
The billionaire owner of X has brushed off an Australian
government demand that certain posts about the Western Sydney church stabbing
attack be removed.
Social media platform X has pledged to fight Australia’s
online safety watchdog over posts about a stabbing at a Western Sydney church.
The platform’s Global Government Affairs team on Saturday
said Australia’s eSafety Commissioner had ordered it to remove some posts that
commented on the attack.
But it said the posts did not violate X’s rules on violent
speech.
The platform claimed the Australian regulator had demanded X
“globally withhold these posts or face a daily fine of $785,000”.
“X believes that eSafety’s order was not within the scope of
Australian law and we complied with the directive pending a legal challenge,”
the Global Government Affairs account posted on Saturday.
“While X respects the right of a country to enforce its laws
within its jurisdiction, the eSafety Commissioner does not have the authority
to dictate what content X’s users can see globally.
“We will robustly challenge this unlawful and dangerous
approach in court.”
The commissioner has only said it was considering whether
further regulatory action was warranted, after it put social media platforms on
notice to remove graphic content showing recent violence in Sydney.
Federal Health Minister Mark Butler said the government
would take X to task if it wanted to pursue the matter in court.
“Australia is not going to be bullied by Elon Musk, or any
other tech billionaire, in our commitment to making sure that social media is a
safe space,” Butler told reporters in Adelaide.
“So if he wants to fight that fine in court, well, we’re up
for that fight.”
Calls have grown for harsher sanctions for social media
platforms in the wake of the April 13 shopping centre massacre at Bondi after
distressing footage of the attack was uploaded online and misinformation
spread.
NSW Premier Chris Minns said X had shown “disregard for the
information that they pump into our communities”.
“Then when things go wrong, throwing their hands up in the
air to say that they’re not prepared to do anything about it,” he told
reporters.
The premier and other leaders met with Assyrian community
groups after the church stabbing and they collectively condemned violence.
“If anyone acts in that way, they are doing it in complete
defiance of the religious leadership of NSW and it is against the law,” Minns
said.
A 16-year-old boy was charged with terrorism offences over
the church stabbing and is next due to face court in June.
On Friday evening, 45-year-old Sam Haddad was arrested at a
Fairfield Heights home and charged with rioting and threatening violence,
causing fear.
Haddad fronted Parramatta Bail Court on Saturday and was
granted bail on the condition he report to police every day and live at a
specific address.
He is next due before Fairfield Local Court on Wednesday.
A 28-year-old man was also charged over the incident and was
due to face court on Saturday.
Police hope high-visibility patrols in the region will curb
conflict after the knife-wielding teenager allegedly struck Bishop Mar Mari
Emmanuel, 53, who was delivering a sermon on Monday night.
The stabbing - which has since been declared an act of
terrorism - triggered a riot outside the Christ the Good Shepherd Church in
Wakeley, leaving dozens of police officers injured.
The lawyer of the boy charged over the stabbing told a court
the teenager had received intermittent treatment for his mental health for
years.
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