Wednesday, May 08, 2024

Death on our doorstep


Six people were murdered, and a dozen more seriously injured, in a manic stabbing frenzy at Bondi Junction Westfield on 13 April. The attack has sent shockwaves around Australia. It is also uncomfortably close to home.

Bondi Junction Westfield is a massive complex. It contains 445 retailers and services including a gym, two supermarkets, two department stores, a major discount department store and outlets for many of the world’s prestige brands including Prada, Gucci and Louis Vuitton.

It’s one of Australia’s largest shopping malls, filling several city blocks, some linked by a multi-level aerial glass-walled walkway. It’s also our closest retail centre. As a result, like so many in the area, Garry and I regularly visit this sprawling mall to shop or use its multi-level parking garage when attending medical and dental appointments.

This particular Saturday began like any other. While thousands went shopping, Garry and I drove north to spend the afternoon enjoying lunch with his parents. As we dined, a 40-year-old man, Joel Cauchi, walked into Bondi Junction Westfield carrying what onlookers described as a 30-centimetre-long hunting knife and began a deadly rampage.

As the attack unfolded panicked shoppers and staff barricaded themselves in storerooms and others hid in change rooms, while shops locked their doors and pulled down shutters. Alerted to the carnage by fleeing shoppers, a lone female police officer Inspector Amy Scott, entered the complex. Terrified bystanders directed her to the attacker on level five. She sprinted up the building until she encountered Cauchi. She ordered him to drop the weapon. He lunged towards her. She shot him dead.

Garry and I didn’t hear of the day’s tragic events until we headed home. Rhonda called to share the news as we drove away. The rest of our journey was spent listening to live radio broadcasts outside the mall. The victims, a classic cross-section of cosmopolitan Sydney, included migrants, a tourist, the daughter of a wealthy well-known Sydney figure, a grandmother and a young, first-time mother.

Investigators have learned that the killer suffers from schizophrenia. His father told the police he’d recently stopped taking his medication. It appears Cauchi may have been experiencing some sort of manic psychotic episode. Tragically, in the weeks since two more mentally ill men have made headlines in separate stabbing incidents. However, unlike the Bondi Junction killer, these two men appear to have been radicalized by online content. 

The first frenzied attack took place as evangelical Bishop Mar Mari Emmanuel was live-streaming a weekly sermon. The attack put the bishop and another priest at the Christ the Good Shepherd Church in hospital. Fifty-one police officers were subsequently hurt in an ensuing riot outside the church while the rampaging teen attacker sustained a severed finger during the stabbing.

Then, last week, a teenager was shot dead by police after he’d stabbed a shopper in the car park of a Perth Bunnings store. These incidents are tragic and incredibly traumatic for those impacted. Like many Australians, I struggle to understand why individuals with serious mental health problems are falling through the cracks in our nation’s health system?

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