Australia's Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke said he has “full confidence” in the domestic intelligence agency ASIO amid questions about the Bondi attack suspects' trip to the Philippines. Naveed Akram, 24, faces 59 charges including 15 counts of murder. Burke reviewed ASIO’s handling of Akram since 2019, when he was linked to an alleged Islamic State cell. "I have confidence in the decisions that were made," Burke told ABC’s 7.30 program. Despite the attack killing 15, including 10-year-old Matilda, who will be given a funeral soon, Burke said he won’t use the issue for politics. Seventeen injured remain hospitalized, some critically. Israeli PM Benjamin Netanyahu blamed "rampant antisemitism" and accused Australian PM Anthony Albanese of encouraging extremism by recognizing Palestine. Albanese rejected this. At a Sydney memorial, Albanese called the attack “pure evil” and urged unity. The suspects, father Sajid Akram, killed by police, and son Naveed, reportedly stayed four weeks in Davao city, Philippines, an area known for militant activity. Burke refused to disclose if ASIO monitored them during this trip but said their names stay on alert lists for long. He confirmed ASIO and Australian Federal Police have more resources than ever to fight extremism. ASIO chief Mike Burgess warned that groups like Hizb ut-Tahrir fuel antisemitism even if they don't openly promote violence. Burke said he would ban that group if it met the legal threat level, which he says it has not yet reached.