Australian nurses stood over the ‘villa’ of the anti -Semitic video
Two Australian nurses were suspended after a video showed them that showed them that they were threatening to kill Israeli patients and brag about refusing treatment.
A man and a woman – both employees at Sydney Hospital – are now being investigated by police, officials said in New South Wales (NSW).
Health Minister Ryan Park said that a “thorough investigation” would be conducted to make sure there is no “harmful [patient] The results, but that the “fast” testing of hospital records did not become any strange.
Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese condemned the video as “sick and shameful” after he started circling the internet.
It comes less than a week after Australia has passed stricter laws against hate crimes after a wave of high anti -Semitic attacks.
On Wednesday, the NSW police said they believed they were “identified by individuals involved” in the video.
Health Minister said they both gave up immediately and promised that she would never work again in the NSW health care system.
The video was shared by the creator of the Max Veifer contents on Tictok, who says it is from Israel.
His account contains conversations with the people they encounter in the chatrullet application – an anonymous Internet platform that randomly connects people for video chat.
The footage that the BBC has seen has seems to have been recorded in the hospital.
The man, who claims to be a doctor, tells Mr. Veifer that he “has beautiful eyes,” but adds “I’m sorry to be Israel” before he said he was sending the Israelis in Jahannam – an Islamic place related to hell.
He continues to create a gesture for sore throat, before the woman comes to the screen and says that “time one day” will come to “Mr. Veifer’s time” and that she will die, later adding that she will not treat the Israelites.
“I will not treat them, I will kill them,” she says.
The video is decorated, emojis added, and some comments are exhausted – but the authorities do not question his authenticity.
Albanese described this as “disgusting” and “villas”, writing on X: “These anti -Semitic comments, guided by hatred, have no place in our health system and nowhere in Australia.
“Individuals who have been found to have committed criminal anti -Semitic acts will face the full power of our laws.”
The park also apologized to the Jewish community and said that he wanted to convince them that they could still expect the health care of the “first class” in NSW.
“There is no place in our hospital and the healthcare system for this kind of view that is ever going on. There is no room for this perspective in our society.”
He added that staff at the hospital in the Bankstown suburbs were embarrassed and shame, but said it did not diminish the good job they did.
In recent months, in incidents not associated with hospital video, there have been a series of fire attacks and graffiti involving homes, cars and synagogues in Jewish areas across Australia, which has caused fear in the community.
The caravan full of explosives of the power gel warned by the police has the potential to cause the “mass victim’s event” found in the NSW January, with a document with anti -Semitic feelings and a list of Jewish goals in Sydney.
Executive Director of the Australian Jewish Executive Council Alex Ryvchin said that the video once again served as a warning sign to all Australians about the evil that exists in our midst. ”