logo
#

Latest news with #ScentreGroup

Scentre Group (STGPF) was upgraded to a Hold Rating at Macquarie
Scentre Group (STGPF) was upgraded to a Hold Rating at Macquarie

Business Insider

time3 days ago

  • Business
  • Business Insider

Scentre Group (STGPF) was upgraded to a Hold Rating at Macquarie

In a report released today, from Macquarie upgraded Scentre Group (STGPF – Research Report) to a Hold, with a price target of A$3.24. Confident Investing Starts Here: Easily unpack a company's performance with TipRanks' new KPI Data for smart investment decisions Receive undervalued, market resilient stocks right to your inbox with TipRanks' Smart Value Newsletter Scentre Group has an analyst consensus of Strong Buy, with a price target consensus of $2.51. The company has a one-year high of $3.09 and a one-year low of $1.59. Currently, Scentre Group has an average volume of 9,213.

Security staff need counselling, can't return to work after Westfield Bondi Junction attack
Security staff need counselling, can't return to work after Westfield Bondi Junction attack

West Australian

time26-05-2025

  • West Australian

Security staff need counselling, can't return to work after Westfield Bondi Junction attack

Some security staff still require counselling and haven't been able to return to work at the Westfield Bondi Junction shopping centre following the 2024 stabbing rampage, an inquest has been told. Joel Cauchi stabbed 16 people and killed Dawn Singleton, Yixuan Cheng, Faraz Ahmed Tahir, Ashlee Good, Jade Young and Pikria Darchia at Westfield Bondi Junction on April 13, 2024, before he was then shot dead by police. A coronial inquest into the attack was told some security staff hadn't been able to return to work at the shopping centre following the tragedy. The shopping centre is operated by Scentre Group, which uses subcontractors Falkon and Glad Group. Glad chief executive Steve Iloski told the inquest that several staff had been affected by the attack and needed counselling and support from the Employee Assistance Program. He said Glad was doing 'everything in our power' to get them back on their feet. 'I take that quite serious,' Mr Iloski told the court. 'Our priority is the welfare of our staff … We had counselling services, financial aid that was acquired for the staff to continue actively in life in general.' He paid tribute to security guard Mr Tahir, who was killed during his first day on the job at the shopping centre. 'That day changed lives, it took lives (in) the cruellest of circumstances,' Mr Iloski said. 'Faraz Tahir was clearly so loved by his family, friends, community, and I can confidently say that his loss …(has) been felt deeply across Glad Group and the security industry.' He also extended his thoughts to Mr Tahir's family as well as the families of the five other victims and surviving security guard Muhammad Taha. 'You were injured trying to protect others … We owe you our deepest respect and gratitude,' he said. Mr Iloski said the tragedy had 'hit home' for him even though he wasn't present on the day. 'I really am sorry, what's happened on that day – it's heart wrenching,' he told the court. 'I've got young kids … it really hits home. As a leader, we've always taken security and safety as paramount. 'The team did the best they could, I don't think anything would've changed that day unfortunately. 'Mr Cauchi … his intent was very clear 'I'm very sorry, and we take this quite seriously.' The responses and policies of Scentre and Glad have been probed at length over the course of the inquest, which entered its fifth and final week on Monday morning. This included the competency of the sole control room operator, who can only be known as CR1, rostered to the CCTV control room on the day of the attack. The court was earlier told how she failed to answer questions related to an active armed offender on a competency checklist weeks before her training was signed off in January 2024 and how she went to the bathroom 40 seconds before Cauchi stabbed his first victim, leaving the room unmonitored. Cauchi had attacked eight people by the time she re-entered, with all 16 people stabbed by the time another security employee (known as CR2) entered the room about 3.36pm. Security expert Scott Wilson told the court that he didn't feel CR1 performed her job adequately on the day. Public announcements were also not made until about 20 minutes after the first victim was stabbed. When they were finally made about 3.52pm, they were done from a room external to the CCTV control room, and people were unsure whether the person making them (CR1) was under duress as she sounded 'distressed and distraught', the court was told. An automated PA system had since been put in place at the shopping centre, along with a raft of other measures, the court was told. Mr Iloski told the court that the inquest has been 'very valuable', and while some of the evidence had been 'hard' for team members, scrutiny was important. mental health support

‘Changed lives': Revelation after Bondi attack
‘Changed lives': Revelation after Bondi attack

Perth Now

time26-05-2025

  • Perth Now

‘Changed lives': Revelation after Bondi attack

Some security staff still require counselling and haven't been able to return to work at the Westfield Bondi Junction shopping centre following the 2024 stabbing rampage, an inquest has been told. Joel Cauchi stabbed 16 people and killed Dawn Singleton, Yixuan Cheng, Faraz Ahmed Tahir, Ashlee Good, Jade Young and Pikria Darchia at Westfield Bondi Junction on April 13, 2024, before he was then shot dead by police. A coronial inquest into the attack was told some security staff hadn't been able to return to work at the shopping centre following the tragedy. The shopping centre is operated by Scentre Group, which uses subcontractors Falkon and Glad Group. Glad chief executive Steve Iloski told the inquest that several staff had been affected by the attack and needed counselling and support from the Employee Assistance Program. Staff members have been unable to return to work at the Westfield Bondi Junction shopping centre following the tragedy. NewsWire / Gaye Gerard Credit: News Corp Australia He said Glad was doing 'everything in our power' to get them back on their feet. 'I take that quite serious,' Mr Iloski told the court. 'Our priority is the welfare of our staff … We had counselling services, financial aid that was acquired for the staff to continue actively in life in general.' He paid tribute to security guard Mr Tahir, who was killed during his first day on the job at the shopping centre. 'That day changed lives, it took lives (in) the cruellest of circumstances,' Mr Iloski said. 'Faraz Tahir was clearly so loved by his family, friends, community, and I can confidently say that his loss …(has) been felt deeply across Glad Group and the security industry.' He also extended his thoughts to Mr Tahir's family as well as the families of the five other victims and surviving security guard Muhammad Taha. 'You were injured trying to protect others … We owe you our deepest respect and gratitude,' he said. Security guard Faraz Tahir was killed during his first day working at the shopping centre. Supplied. Credit: Supplied Mr Iloski said the tragedy had 'hit home' for him even though he wasn't present on the day. 'I really am sorry, what's happened on that day – it's heart wrenching,' he told the court. 'I've got young kids … it really hits home. As a leader, we've always taken security and safety as paramount. 'The team did the best they could, I don't think anything would've changed that day unfortunately. 'Mr Cauchi … his intent was very clear 'I'm very sorry, and we take this quite seriously.' Bondi stabbing victims (top l-r) Dawn Singleton, Ashlee Good, Cheng Yixuan, (bottom l-r) Faraz Tahir, Jade Young and Pikria Darchia. Credit: Supplied The responses and policies of Scentre and Glad have been probed at length over the course of the inquest, which entered its fifth and final week on Monday morning. This included the competency of the sole control room operator, who can only be known as CR1, rostered to the CCTV control room on the day of the attack. The court was earlier told how she failed to answer questions related to an active armed offender on a competency checklist weeks before her training was signed off in January 2024 and how she went to the bathroom 40 seconds before Cauchi stabbed his first victim, leaving the room unmonitored. Joel Cauchi stabbed 16 people, killing six, before he was shot dead. Supplied. Credit: Supplied Cauchi had attacked eight people by the time she re-entered, with all 16 people stabbed by the time another security employee (known as CR2) entered the room about 3.36pm. Security expert Scott Wilson told the court that he didn't feel CR1 performed her job adequately on the day. Public announcements were also not made until about 20 minutes after the first victim was stabbed. When they were finally made about 3.52pm, they were done from a room external to the CCTV control room, and people were unsure whether the person making them (CR1) was under duress as she sounded 'distressed and distraught', the court was told. An automated PA system had since been put in place at the shopping centre, along with a raft of other measures, the court was told. Mr Iloski told the court that the inquest has been 'very valuable', and while some of the evidence had been 'hard' for team members, scrutiny was important. mental health support

Security staff need counselling, can't return to work after Westfield Bondi Junction attack
Security staff need counselling, can't return to work after Westfield Bondi Junction attack

News.com.au

time26-05-2025

  • News.com.au

Security staff need counselling, can't return to work after Westfield Bondi Junction attack

Some security staff still require counselling and haven't been able to return to work at the Westfield Bondi Junction shopping centre following the 2024 stabbing rampage, an inquest has been told. Joel Cauchi stabbed 16 people and killed Dawn Singleton, Yixuan Cheng, Faraz Ahmed Tahir, Ashlee Good, Jade Young and Pikria Darchia at Westfield Bondi Junction on April 13, 2024, before he was then shot dead by police. A coronial inquest into the attack was told some security staff hadn't been able to return to work at the shopping centre following the tragedy. The shopping centre is operated by Scentre Group, which uses subcontractors Falkon and Glad Group. Glad chief executive Steve Iloski told the inquest that several staff had been affected by the attack and needed counselling and support from the Employee Assistance Program. He said Glad was doing 'everything in our power' to get them back on their feet. 'I take that quite serious,' Mr Iloski told the court. 'Our priority is the welfare of our staff … We had counselling services, financial aid that was acquired for the staff to continue actively in life in general.' He paid tribute to security guard Mr Tahir, who was killed during his first day on the job at the shopping centre. 'That day changed lives, it took lives (in) the cruellest of circumstances,' Mr Iloski said. 'Faraz Tahir was clearly so loved by his family, friends, community, and I can confidently say that his loss …(has) been felt deeply across Glad Group and the security industry.' He also extended his thoughts to Mr Tahir's family as well as the families of the five other victims and surviving security guard Muhammad Taha. 'You were injured trying to protect others … We owe you our deepest respect and gratitude,' he said. Mr Iloski said the tragedy had 'hit home' for him even though he wasn't present on the day. 'I really am sorry, what's happened on that day – it's heart wrenching,' he told the court. 'I've got young kids … it really hits home. As a leader, we've always taken security and safety as paramount. 'The team did the best they could, I don't think anything would've changed that day unfortunately. 'Mr Cauchi … his intent was very clear 'I'm very sorry, and we take this quite seriously.' The responses and policies of Scentre and Glad have been probed at length over the course of the inquest, which entered its fifth and final week on Monday morning. This included the competency of the sole control room operator, who can only be known as CR1, rostered to the CCTV control room on the day of the attack. The court was earlier told how she failed to answer questions related to an active armed offender on a competency checklist weeks before her training was signed off in January 2024 and how she went to the bathroom 40 seconds before Cauchi stabbed his first victim, leaving the room unmonitored. Cauchi had attacked eight people by the time she re-entered, with all 16 people stabbed by the time another security employee (known as CR2) entered the room about 3.36pm. Security expert Scott Wilson told the court that he didn't feel CR1 performed her job adequately on the day. Public announcements were also not made until about 20 minutes after the first victim was stabbed. When they were finally made about 3.52pm, they were done from a room external to the CCTV control room, and people were unsure whether the person making them (CR1) was under duress as she sounded 'distressed and distraught', the court was told. An automated PA system had since been put in place at the shopping centre, along with a raft of other measures, the court was told. Mr Iloski told the court that the inquest has been 'very valuable', and while some of the evidence had been 'hard' for team members, scrutiny was important.

Security chief tells Bondi Junction inquest Westfield has ‘very strong security culture' due to Frank Lowy
Security chief tells Bondi Junction inquest Westfield has ‘very strong security culture' due to Frank Lowy

The Guardian

time20-05-2025

  • The Guardian

Security chief tells Bondi Junction inquest Westfield has ‘very strong security culture' due to Frank Lowy

Westfield's global security chief has pushed back against criticism of how guards responded to the Bondi Junction stabbing attack, telling an inquest the company has a 'very strong security culture' established by founder Frank Lowy. John Yates, the director of security at Scentre Group, which operates Westfield malls globally, told the New South Wales coroners court about his previous career serving as the most senior detective in London's Metropolitan police from 2007 to 2009. Yates then worked as the most senior counter-terrorism figure in the UK, including providing protection for the royal family and at Heathrow airport, the inquest was told on Tuesday. He was questioned about security operations at Westfield Bondi Junction after the inquest previously heard a security officer had left the CCTV control room for a toilet break when Joel Cauchi, 40, launched his stabbing attack that killed six people and injured 10 others in April 2024. During Monday's proceedings, a British counter-terrorism expert claimed that even when they returned to the control room, the guard, known as CR1, did not respond in a timely manner as the attack unfolded. In a triple-zero call played in court, the security officer could be heard telling police there had been 'shots fired'. Asked if there were injuries, she replied: 'We're not aware, we're just evacuating the centre as quickly as we can.' Later in the call, she added: 'So I was just informed that we've got three to four injuries and two stabbings' and 'the police are doing CPR on someone on level five'. On Tuesday, Yates told the inquest he thought earlier evidence criticising CR1's behaviour was 'very harsh'. He suggested it was 'unrealistic' to expect security guards – who undergo 80 hours of training and are paid between $26 and $28 per hour – to perform like police, who in NSW attend a residential training college for six months before being paired with a senior officer. 'Their role is to observe, report, escalate ... it's certainly not to engage [with an attacker],' Yates told the court. Yates said Scentre Group had a security team, including a small intelligence operation, which monitored physical safety and cybersecurity. He said that was unusual for a shopping centre company and was due to founder Frank Lowy taking security seriously. 'I'd say we have a very strong security culture,' Yates said on Tuesday. The security chief responded to criticism of the triple-zero call that CR1 made to report the incident that could have confused NSW police. Sign up to Morning Mail Our Australian morning briefing breaks down the key stories of the day, telling you what's happening and why it matters after newsletter promotion He said that sitting in the CCTV control room was more complicated than 'monitoring a bank of screens' – with only the main exits and entries displayed constantly. He said there were hundreds of cameras installed across Westfield Bondi Junction and that knowing which camera to bring up to follow a live incident was not straightforward. 'The idea that you can go straight to the right camera and then immediately start to follow, track ... is totally unrealistic,' Yates told the inquest. In addressing concerns about CR1's clarity in the triple-zero call, Yates referenced his time at London's Metropolitan police, and examples of even highly trained professionals making 'catastrophic errors'. Yates brought up the Metropolitan police killing of Brazilian electrician Jean Charles de Menezes – who they suspected to be a terrorist – at Stockwell tube station in the weeks after the 2005 London bombings as an example of 'people under pressure making poor decisions'. Yates defended CR1 as 'competent to be in that control room' on the day. 'I think she did the best she could with what she knew herself,' he said. 'She undoubtedly struggled on the day,' he conceded, but added it was a 'horrible multigenerational event'. The inquest continues.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store