Australia Day bbq... genocide?

Meet the Councillor Who Thinks Your Sausage Sizzle Leads to Genocide

27 January 2026

4.2 MINS

Yesterday was Australia Day and, like most people around this magnificent, occasionally malfunctioning continent, I was celebrating it.

I’m celebrating the country that took a few boatloads of half-starved British misfits and somehow turned them into the safest, freest, wealthiest society in human history — a nation so stable, that even people who loathe it feel perfectly safe living here while denouncing it.

Which brings us to Western Sydney councillor Ahmed Ouf.

According to Councillor Ouf, if you celebrate Australia Day, you’re celebrating a holocaust.

That’s not a metaphor. That’s not rhetorical exuberance.

That’s an actual accusation of genocide — casually lobbed like a hand grenade into the middle of social cohesion week.

Maximum Outrage

In one sentence, he manages to insult Jews — who suffered an actual holocaust — and Australians, whose ancestors never committed any such thing.

It takes a special kind of moral clumsiness to trivialise the worst crime in history while accusing your neighbours of being latent mass murderers.

But wait — it gets worse.

Councillor Ouf goes on to suggest that anyone who celebrates Australia Day should be treated with deep suspicion.

Why?

Because, he says, if you’re willing to celebrate a “holocaust”, who’s to say you wouldn’t be happy to run one yourself if the opportunity arose?

Apparently, the backyard barbecue is just phase one. Phase two is genocide.

Have a listen to this masterpiece of community-building:

“If you are okay with celebrating the beginning of a genocide, maybe one day when you have the chance, you might start another genocide”

Ah yes. History shows… nothing escalates into mass extermination quite like a sausage sizzle and a few kids with sparklers.

At a time when Australia desperately needs calm heads, shared values and a tiny bit of gratitude, it beggars belief that an elected councillor would pump out this kind of deliberately incendiary nonsense.

I’ll show you more of his comments in a moment.

But first, let’s acknowledge the breathtaking irony at work here.

Puzzling

Councillor Ahmed Ouf arrived in this country in 2010 — as an immigrant — from Egypt.

Australia gave him and his family the opportunity to build a life that would have been almost unimaginable back in the country of his birth: safety, prosperity, free speech, political participation, religious freedom — the whole Western bundle.

We even gave him the privilege of standing for office and being elected to local government.

As a member of local government, paid a handsome wage by ratepayers, he’s meant to organise garbage removal and the maintenance of local parks.

Instead, he uses the privileges we’ve afforded him to post videos saying things like this:

The Australian holocaust began on 26 of Jan 1788.

At that time Australia was home to around 1 million Aboriginal people. These were stable societies that lived for tens of thousands of years.

What followed was catastrophic.

Massacres, genocide, forced removals, ethnic cleansing, introduced disease. The destruction of land, food systems, families and culture.

If all of that were true — and of course it isn’t — there was no genocide, no ethnic cleansing, and certainly no “holocaust” … but if it WERE true, there’s an obvious question:

Why did Councillor Ouf move his family here?

If Australia is nothing more than a vast open-air crime scene soaked in permanent moral contamination, why choose it as your destination of choice?

Why raise your children here?

Why seek public office here?

Why accept a taxpayer-funded salary here?

Unless, of course, you don’t actually believe your own rhetoric — you just find it politically useful.

Beggars Belief

Councillor Ahmed Ouf is, shall we say, an interesting character.

He has been accused of meeting with members of Hamas.

Yet somehow… in his telling… he is not the problem.

No. The real threat to Australia is not radical ideology, imported grievance politics or moral arson. The real danger is ordinary Australians who like their country.

He says of people celebrating Australia Day:

I have my doubts, and I have my concerns about them. Living amongst them is something that doesn’t bring any peace or comfort with me because

And then he casually adds:

If you are okay about celebrating, then maybe one day you might start another genocide.

So if you enjoy Australia Day, you’re basically a genocidal maniac in waiting.

Which raises a practical question.

If Councillor Ahmed feels so unsafe living among Australians who celebrate their own nation… he could always leave.

Egypt is lovely this time of year.

But of course he won’t.

Because in Egypt you don’t get paid by taxpayers to insult your host nation, flirt with extremist rhetoric and lecture the public about moral purity from the comfort of a Western democracy.

Manufactured Division

Which brings us to Council Ahmed Ouf’s final flourish of absurdity:

“If you truly care about the victims of Bondi, if the mass killings of Palestinians over the past two years has moved you, and if the suffering of Ukrainian people has shaken you, then stand with us this Monday.

“Join us on the streets of Sydney and across Australia as we push for an Australia Day that represents everyone. We will keep pushing until truth is recognised, until justice is honoured.”

Councillor Ahmed Ouf was endorsed to run at the last federal election by the Muslim Votes mob.

You’d imagine they might want to improve their candidate screening. Then again, maybe their screening worked exactly as it was designed.

He stood in Jason Clare’s seat of Blaxland and won 20 percent of the vote.

One voter in five – in that Western Sydney seat – believes this bloke is needed in the federal parliament.

And that tells you something important about the direction certain activist blocs would like this country to travel.

They want us to travel away from liberal democracy and towards imported tribal politics where loyalty is demanded, dissent is pathologised, and national identity itself is treated as a moral disease.

That’s the real argument beneath the shouting about January 26.

Anyone who thinks this is an argument about a date hasn’t been paying attention.

It’s not about where in the calendar we celebrate Australia Day. It’s about whether Australia remains a confident nation… or becomes merely a neutral economic zone where everyone is free to take, complain, and reshape it into something unrecognisable.

I’m celebrating Australia Day today.

Not because Australia is perfect — no country is — but because it is decent, free, generous, inventive, and remarkably self-correcting.

And because, unlike some of its critics, I actually love the place that gave me everything.

___

Republished with thanks to The James Macpherson Report. Image courtesy of Adobe.

We need your help. The continued existence of the Daily Declaration depends on the generosity of readers like you. Donate now. The Daily Declaration is committed to keeping our site free of advertising so we can stay independent and continue to stand for the truth.

Fake news and censorship make the work of the Canberra Declaration and our Christian news site the Daily Declaration more important than ever. Take a stand for family, faith, freedom, life, and truth. Support us as we shine a light in the darkness. Donate now.

6 Comments

  1. eb467d1b092992f284cb0081eef3f387290a2564b4b038143e44de039dd1b26e?s=54&d=mm&r=g
    BB 27 January 2026 at 1:08 pm - Reply

    Obviously an islamist who dreams of genocide. Perhaps we should get Ouf out, and back to his home country before he helps make his projection a reality.

  2. f910f8648b50864a0a4fa9cff6838335a9df65757870ba46526d3fd0fd4d5768?s=54&d=mm&r=g
    Ian Moncrieff 27 January 2026 at 4:32 pm - Reply

    I love celebrating Australia Day, as I did with a barbie, a swim, Church family, and the Australian flag flying from a flagpole in my front yard.

  3. 0420391077f8111996bb838f71e47c0f9bd9c371f65b3429541324068047dbf1?s=54&d=mm&r=g
    countess antonia scrivanich 27 January 2026 at 9:12 pm - Reply

    Very little happening where I live. Like living in a MORGUE. Due to fear ,many Australians whose ancestors fought in WW1+2 are too scared to even mention Australia Day at our Book Group which has ever “so superior ” migrants from UK and Ireland who hate Australia. I don’t care what they think ! They are too scared to challenge me. I was so fed up with flag burning, I became a Life-Member of the Monarchist League to fight for the Flag and Australian Constitution .For 4 weeks I have been confined to my home due to my stupidity of walking at 4am without switching on the light. I gave myself a most horrendous fall which should have broken my nose and taken out my eyes, but, the Good Lord saved me to fight another day in defence of our country . To annoy these ex-Primary school teachers I wear the flag (shorts, top and hat) and hang a huge one outside the house which a lad gave me many years ago . It was made with love by some man or woman out of patches.I have sent Australian flags to relatives and others who live Overseas. I would have loved a BBQ and fireworks, but, next year if I still alive ? Go Aussies ! Rah!, Rah ! You miserable others , you don’t know what you’re missing ! My last husband fought for this country. My children are part Aborigines, and, I am an Associate Member of the RSL. I came as a small , refugee child. My parents integrated into the Australian way of life and were hostile to Multiculturalism. My children’s 7th generation White Australian father died young. At his funeral I learnt he was part-Aboriginal. I am angry that Marchers tell me I have no Right to be here, that I should feel “Guilt ” WHAT for ?

  4. 484db5d50b25ff2756acdc6fcd916b90571f4b84e6aa2609c9bf2f309769b054?s=54&d=mm&r=g
    mario 28 January 2026 at 11:09 am - Reply

    I think we should ask Pauline Hanson to take this man to the airport and send him back to where he came from. Obviously he doesn’t love Australia and doesn’t understand our history.

  5. c9f04e6a2286335a3562407f45431a3a1c481453ecabb64ce69b13cd0d14a5a3?s=54&d=mm&r=g
    Col 28 January 2026 at 7:57 pm - Reply

    Do we really even need a national day?

    Seriously?

    ½ the town was out on Monday getting drunk, including the prayer breakfast which descended into messy behavior because the speeches went too long and the Champagne kept flowing.

    Then Col Stringer spoke and the first thing he did was show this year’s Budweiser commercial, which was really impressive, but then everyone wanted to switch from the Champagne to the beers. And then that continued on for our BBQ and for most of the afternoon and into the night.

    Sadly, not much of an outreach, although the youth pastor reckons one of his mates got saved late into the night, though they were slurring their words so much when I left I doubt it.

    Just get rid of it. Australia Day – we don’t need it. The UK doesn’t have a national public holiday.

    ANZAC Day is our day. Make it a proper national public holiday – and give us a day off in lieu when it falls on the Weekend.

  6. 1017b46984ba917549b0ed6b58e71f226d7918deacbf23e40e05a92b0700d06c?s=54&d=mm&r=g
    Dianne Douglas 1 February 2026 at 9:17 pm - Reply

    Reading what this Ouf fellow is spouting, I just feel angry at those people who take what this country has to offer (they know how to work the system to get maximum financial benefits) and then begin to rubbish all we stand for. Added to that, they bring their own hatred and biases and refuse to become ‘Australian’. Why do they come here? Oh, that’s right, to establish a caliphate and sharia law! My apologies to those who do come here for the right reasons, may you enjoy the freedoms and prosperity available.

Leave A Comment

Recent Articles:

Use your voice today to protect

Faith · Family · Freedom · Life

MOST POPULAR

ABOUT

The Daily Declaration is an Australian Christian news site dedicated to providing a voice for Christian values in the public square. Our vision is to see the revitalisation of our Judeo-Christian values for the common good. We are non-profit, independent, crowdfunded, and provide Christian news for a growing audience across Australia, Asia, and the South Pacific. The opinions of our contributors do not necessarily reflect the views of The Daily Declaration. Read More.

MOST COMMENTS

GOOD NEWS

HALL OF FAME

BROWSE TOPICS

BROWSE GENRES