Weary of bomb threats to mosques and schools and mounting levels of persecution, Muslims in Australia are calling on the government to take Islamophobia seriously.

More than 50 recommendations to tackle prejudice against Muslims have been outlined in a landmark report by special envoy to combat Islamophobia Aftab Malik.

They include enacting federal religious freedom laws, updating religious discrimination legislation and reviewing counter-terrorism policies in an effort “to engender a fair, respectful and inclusive environment”.

Mr Malik’s report released on Friday with Prime Minister Anthony Albanese comes days after a man placed a device at a Gold Coast mosque in an alleged bomb hoax and an Islamic school in Brisbane received a bomb threat that forced the evacuation of hundreds of students and staff.

The Islamophobia Register’s Queensland-based executive director Nora Amath said Muslims felt targeted and afraid against the backdrop of recent anti-migrant rallies.

“We’re seeing an escalation of intensity,” she told AAP.

“For the very first time, we’re seeing back-to-back physical assaults and back-to-back bomb threats which is all very concerning.”

Dr Amath said the fear was compounded for Muslim women when they were in public by themselves or with other women.

“They are seen as easy targets … who are weak and vulnerable because of misrepresentations that they are submissive and oppressed,” she said.

A file photo of Nora Amath
The Islamophobia Register’s executive director Nora Amath says there’s an escalation in intensity. (Flavio Brancaleone/AAP PHOTOS)

Islamophobic incidents had “skyrocketed” since 2023 with a 150 per cent increase recorded by November 2024, Mr Malik said the register’s research showed.

Muslim women and girls accounted for three-quarters of all Islamophobia victims, three-fifths of physical assaults and every target of reported spitting incidents, the report said.

Most of the perpetrators were men.

One in three Australians also had expressed negative views about Muslims, research has found.

Australian National Imams Council senior advisor Bilal Rauf said the report strengthened the case for religious protections, which the peak religious body has lobbied for.

Aftab Malik
Special envoy to combat Islamophobia Aftab Malik’s report had more than 50 steps to tackle prejudice (Bianca De Marchi/AAP PHOTOS)

He said the onus was on Prime Minister Anthony Albanese and his government to take the recommendations seriously, “so it’s not just lip service”.

The Australian Muslim Advocacy Network was more critical, saying it did not share the government’s rationale for establishing the Islamophobia and anti-Semitism envoy roles but welcomed the recommendations.

The network supported new measures to treat hate crimes more seriously without expanding crimes and police powers or restricting free speech. 

“The recommendation to establish independent scrutiny panels to improve the way hate crimes are policed is a positive step,” the network said.

“All communities deserve equal protection from hate, and applying different standards creates unfairness in a multicultural society.”