SYDNEY - Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese described as "extraordinary" on Monday a decision by social media platform X to challenge in court a cyber regulators' order for the removal of some posts about the stabbing of a bishop in Sydney.
ALSO READ: X vows to challenge Australian order to remove stabbing posts
Police have charged a 16-year-old with a terrorism offense in the attack on an Assyrian church bishop, Mar Mari Emmanuel, last Monday. Videos online showed the attacker, restrained by the congregation, shouting at the bishop for insulting Islam.
But X responded that the posts did not violate its rules on violent speech, adding that the regulator had no authority to dictate content its users can see globally, an approach it vowed to challenge in court as being "unlawful and dangerous"
Albanese criticized the broadcast of violent images and said some social media content exacerbated the pain of many people.
READ MORE: Teen charged with terrorism over Sydney bishop stabbing
"I find it extraordinary that X chose not to comply and are trying to argue their case," Albanese told a press conference, adding that X's response to the order by a government panel contrasted with that of other social media providers.
"This isn't about freedom of expression," Albanese said.
"This is about the dangerous implications that can occur when things that are simply not true ... are replicated and weaponized in order to cause division."
In this case, the promotion of negative statements had the potential to inflame a very difficult situation, he added.
The Australian panel, known as the eSafety Commissioner, works to remove harmful online content. It had ordered X to remove certain posts that "publicly commented" on the attack.
But X responded that the posts did not violate its rules on violent speech, adding that the regulator had no authority to dictate content its users can see globally, an approach it vowed to challenge in court as being "unlawful and dangerous".
READ MORE: Mass stabbing attack at Sydney mall not driven by ideology, police say
"The Australian censorship commissar is demanding *global* content bans!" entrepreneur Elon Musk, who bought Twitter for $44 billion in 2022 and renamed it as X last year, said in a post.
Several lawmakers have criticized social media for not doing enough to remove misinformation over the stabbing.
Last year the regulator said X had become Australia's top platform for online hate since Musk lifted bans on a reported 62,000 accounts.