Senator Fatima Payman has called what she claims a 'double standard' is in the indignation about two Sydney nurses who are caught on the camera, making mean anti-Semitic remarks.
Senator Payman spoke on Sunday, After nurses Ahmed 'Rashid' Nadir and Sarah Abu Lebdeh The Israeli influencer Max Veifer told that they would kill their Jewish patients in a video that went viral.
Senator Payman said what the nurses were doing was wrong and “luckily no Israeli patient was killed,” but said it was time to continue.
“They have made a terrible remark, but they have been treated as if they committed the absolutely worst crime,” said Senator Payman.
'These persons are dismissed, forbidden to work again as nurses, robbed by the police, placed under the most intense public control and now they have been admitted to the hospital, they have apologized, they have been punished.
'What is the final goal here? What exactly do we try to achieve? Justice or just public humiliation?
'We never see the same level of anger and vitriol when the roles were reversed, it was not long ago that there was a horrible, unpriked attack on an imam in Sydney where an anti-Muslim, anti-Palestinian woman tried to run him About with a vehicle near a local high school, an actual attempted manslaughter.
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Ahmed 'Rashid' Nadir (left) and Sarah Abu Lebdeh told the Israeli influencer Max Veifer that they would kill their Jewish patients in a video that went viral
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Firebrand Senator Fatima Payman has released a video on social media calling the alleged 'double standard' after a Vile anti -Semitic nursing video viral
'But where was the national conviction, where was the wall for wall media attention? Where were the prime ministers and prime ministers who denounced it with the same power that we see for the comments of these nurses.
'Instead there was silence, absolutely deafening silence.
'Let me be clear what these nurses said was wrong.
'But I have looked at the coverage and held my tongue for too long. We have to talk about the double standards because it doesn't feel like the indignation for justice is. '
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Nadir (photo) and Abu Lebdeh claimed that they 'will not treat the Israeli people', in which Abu Lebdeh adds: 'I will kill them'
Both Nadir and Abu Lebdeh, who worked in the Bankstown membercombe Hospital in Sydney in Southwest, remain in the spotlight of the police after a video appeared earlier this week.
On Saturday, the police confirmed that they had attacked a house in the west of Sydney, which it was believed to be that of Mr Nadir.
“Officers affiliated with Strike Force Pearl carried out a search order in a house in Bankstown around 6 pm (on Friday), in connection with an ongoing investigation,” said a police statement.
“A number of items have been taken for further research.”
The police have not confirmed any reports that they have received a complete, unprocessed video of the Israeli influencer Max Veifer, who placed the first clip.
On Friday, NSW Police Commissioner Karen Webb said that the police wanted to inform the full video that researchers were charged with potential criminal prosecution.
But late on Friday, the police said they would receive the full video.
Veifer shared a longer, two and a half -minute version of his conversation with the nurses in an online chat room on Friday.
In comments that were not broadcast in the shorter, edited version of the video, Mr. Veifer asked if his service as an Israeli soldier was why Mr Nadir thought he would go to hell.
“Uh, that's definitely the answer, correct,” the nurse replied.
The trio then started talking about the top of each other while appealing his military service, Hamas and the occupied Palestinian territories.
“One day your time will come and you will die the most terrible death,” says Lebdeh.
Mr. Veifer replied: “You spread hatred, we spread positivity, we spread the protection, we spread peace and you spread death.”
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A bottle of morphine would also be found in Nadir's hospital safe
The Australian watchdog of Healthcare has updated its public registers to show that both nurses, who worked in the Bankstowncombe Hospital in Sydney in Southwest, was forbidden to work in every context in the profession '.
The couple also suspended their registrations by the NSW Nursing and Midwifery Council.
CCTV images were seized from the hospital and other employees were interviewed by the police.
The unfolding scandal has broken confidence in the public health system, Prime Minister Chris Minns has admitted and nurses have also expressed destruction and indignation in the comments.
Mr Nadir was treated by emergency services on Thursday evening after a 'care for well -being'.
He gave an apology through a lawyer after he had been demolished from the hospital, but told reporters separately that the incident was a misunderstanding and a mistake before he was admitted to the hospital.