Two people embrace as police officers stand guard outside Bondi Pavilion following the attack on a Jewish holiday celebration at Sydney's Bondi Beach, in Sydney, Australia, 15 December 2025; Credit: Reuters/Flavio Brancaleone/File Photo

SYDNEY (Reuters) - A man accused of opening fire on a Jewish Hanukkah celebration at Sydney's famed Bondi Beach in an attack that killed fifteen people appeared in court for the first time on Monday 16 February 2026, Australian media reported.

24-year-old Naveed Akram faces 59 charges over the 14 December 2025 attack, including fifteen counts of murder, 40 counts of wounding with intent to murder and a terror offence.

Police allege he carried out the mass shooting with his 50-year-old father, Sajid, who was shot dead at the scene.

During a brief status mention at a Sydney court on Monday, Akram appeared via video link from Goulburn Correctional Centre, a maximum-security prison southwest of Sydney, where he is being held on remand, media reported.

Akram wore prison greens and sat mostly in silence during the proceedings. He spoke only to acknowledge that he heard a discussion about extending non-publication orders for the details of the victims.

Outside court, Akram's lawyer Ben Archbold said his client was doing "as well as he can be" given the "very onerous conditions" in prison.

Archbold said it was too early to say how Akram would plead and that he had not discussed details of the alleged attack with him.

"I haven't spoken to him about the attack in that regard," he told reporters. "All that we're doing at the moment is starting the process […] we're waiting for the brief to be served, there's nothing more I can say."

Archbold added that he had visited Akram in prison. "He's just a client, and he's a client that needs to be represented. And we don't let our personal view get in the way of our professional obligations. The matter has been adjourned, I have nothing more to say."

The case is expected to return to court in April 2026.