
The real estate, property development, defence and finance industries are all represented at next month鈥檚聽antisemitism summit on the Gold Coast.
Some of the key individuals in the sponsor companies also have links to the Australia-Israel Chamber of Commerce and major charities contributing to Israel including the Jewish National Fund (JNF). It is unclear how much each sponsor is contributing or from where the sponsors are sourcing their funds.
The 鈥済uardian鈥 sponsor of the聽聽(CAM) is one of Australia鈥檚 largest privately owned companies, Southern Steel. The owner is Peter Smaller, who is worth and is a board member and past president of聽. JNF Australia is registered with , totalling $16.6 million in revenue, much of which goes to Israel.
聽supplies Australia鈥檚 defence industries and is a partner with Bisalloy, holding 18% of its shares, making it the largest shareholder according to Bisalloy鈥檚 latest annual accounts.
Bisalloy supplies armoured steel munitions to Israel, in violation of the United Nations Arms Trade Treaty.
In July, at least 200 local pro-Palestine activists staged a community picket outside Bisalloy, successfully shutting down the company鈥檚 operations for a day.
Defence minister Richard Marles was pressed on ABC Insiders,聽in mid-August, on whether the government considered the export of Bisalloy鈥檚 armoured steel for Israeli armoured vehicles to be acceptable. After a long pause, Marles repeated his line: 鈥淲e are not supplying weapons to Israel.鈥 When asked directly if supplying steel for armoured vehicles was permissible, he replied: 鈥淲e are not contributing to that, David.鈥 This contradicts Bisalloy鈥檚 own website.
As well as CAM, Southern Steel sponsors both the JNF and the Australian-Israel Chamber of Commerce.
Other summit sponsors
Sydney Eastern Suburbs construction company聽聽is another summit sponsor. , its managing director, is a former Israel Defense Forces soldier and a past vice-president of JNF Australia.
罢丑别听, which was established in January to 鈥渞aise millions鈥 to partner with others in fighting antisemitism, is another sponsor. Former Coalition treasurer Josh Frydenberg, now chair of Goldman Sachs Australia, is chair of Dor鈥檚 board of guardians.
Dor operates the Combatting Antisemitism Fund. Its constitution was registered by Arnold Bloch Liebler. An ASIC search shows that there are three directors of Dor Foundation, one of whom is Jeremy Dunkel, who is the chair of Y2i, which raises funds to sponsor trips to Israel for Jewish students.
Dunkel is also a director of聽,聽which includes the聽聽which promotes itself as an Israeli equity fund investing in cutting-edge technologies.聽Its most recent report states that market sentiment was buoyed by the Israeli and US bombing of Iran, which were viewed as 鈥渓ong-term de-escalation events鈥.
Pengana has holdings in Israeli banks and Isramco Negev 2, which is engaged in the production of oil and gas in Israel. The fund offers Australian investors 鈥渁 promising market鈥, including electronic defence and cybersecurity industries.
Another sponsor with property connections is聽, one of Australia鈥檚 largest independent real estate investment funds. Chairperson Michael Easson is a member of Labor Friends of Israel and a speaker at the conference.
Then there is the聽, a privately owned property company that owns and manages commercial properties in Brisbane and Coffs Harbour. Rodney Naumburger is a director and major owner of the group and a past president and current director of the Zionist Council of NSW.
In 2022, Naumburger聽聽arguing that Amnesty International (AI) should be denied charity status because it had issued a report that Israel is an apartheid state.
Naumburger鈥檚 judgment that AI and its report were antisemitic was based on the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance definition of antisemitism. This is the definition that is promoted by the Special Envoy Jillian Segal, which the conference organisers want to see implemented across local government.
Sponsoring attendees
Late July, a letter from CAM to councils stated that 200 councillors and others, across 70 councils, had already registered to attend.聽MichaelWest Media聽asked CAM to confirm these numbers and how many have accepted free accommodation but did not receive a reply.
The conference is marketed as an 鈥渁ll expenses paid鈥 event. The venue and accommodation details are only available to those who have accepted the聽invitation.聽惭奥惭听estimates the basic conference costs to be in the order of $400,000 to $600,000, plus travel reimbursements, speaker costs, advertising, administration and conference materials.
惭奥惭听estimates the total costs to be well over $1 million.
Perhaps hinting at a conference venue,聽聽is a 鈥減latinum sponsor鈥. Meriton is the largest owner of apartment hotels in Australia and a leading property developer. Its managing director, Harry Triguboff, is Australia鈥檚 second-richest individual with a net worth of $29.65 billion. He is a major donor to the JNF and a sponsor of the Australia-Israel Chamber of Commerce.
The invitation offer sent to mayors and councillors is for 鈥渁 large hospitality benefit to be paid for by a variety of advertised commercial sponsors and pro-Israeli partner organisations鈥. This, of course, raises the question of whether such an offer of free hospitality falls within the ethical guidelines of councils.
[Yaakov Aharon and Wendy Bacon write for MichaelWest Media, where .]