Australia PM heckled at Sydney mosque Ramadan event

Australia's prime minister has been heckled during an event at a Sydney mosque marking the end of the holy month of Ramadan.
Anthony Albanese and Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke were at Lakemba Mosque - one of the largest in Australia - after being invited by community leaders to attend Eid prayers on Friday morning, local time.
Several attendees accused the pair of being "genocide supporters", shouting "boo" and "get out of here" as a mosque leader gave a speech calling for the government to better engage with Muslim Australians.
There is deep upset within much of Australia's Muslim community over the government's response to the Israel-Gaza war and rising Islamophobia at home.
A man who was shouting at Albanese was removed from the mosque by police but later released without charge and told to move on, according to news agency Australian Associated Press.
After the speech finished, the prime minister made his way out of the mosque through the crowds and continued to be shouted at by several people, with one asking: "Why is he here? Get him out of here! It's a disgrace".
Shortly after the event finished, the Lebanese Muslim Association - which operates the mosque - released a statement saying Albanese was welcome at the prayers and that they would "continue to open" their doors.
"We understand that emotions are high, particularly given the ongoing suffering in Gaza and the devastation in Lebanon. These are not distant issues for our community," it said.
"But we also need to be clear. Choosing to engage with the elected leadership of this country is not a betrayal of those concerns. It is how we give them a voice."
Albanese later told media he was welcomed by most of the 30,000-plus crowd at the mosque - which has been the target of several threatening letters in recent months.
"Overwhelmingly the reception was incredibly positive," he said, according to the Guardian Australia.
He suggested the unrest from a few protestors may be over his government's recent moves to outlaw extremist organisations such as Hizb ut-Tahrir, a group which calls for a single Islamic government across the Muslim world and which has been accused of celebrating terrorism.
Related articles

Five people found alive after week trapped in flooded Laos cave
The search is continuing for a further two villagers who are still missing, rescuers say.

Paris 'punishingly hot' as Western Europe hit by heatwave
Hugh Schofield reports from Paris as a heat dome settled over Western Europe bringing temperatures above the average for May.