An angry imam has berated mourners at the latest gangster funeral as Rami Iskander was laid to rest in the grave next to his kingpin uncle – both men having been murdered in Sydney’s bloody gangland war.
The man told those gathered to lay the 23-year-old to rest that the city’s Muslim community has been destroyed by drugs and violence, shouting: ‘We’re broken, we’re broken!’
Iskander was laid to rest at Rookwood Cemetery on Wednesday under heavy police guard at a emotional funeral.
He was placed into the grave directly next to his kingpin uncle Mahmoud ‘Brownie’ Ahmad who was buried in the neighbouring plot just over two weeks earlier.
There has been a series of deadly attacks across the last few weeks in Sydney’s west, with a bikie boss and his younger brother also shot while at a gym in Auburn.
Family and friends are seen gathered in front of the coffin of Rami Iskander (pictured) on Wednesday as the 23-year-old was laid to rest
Iskander was shot in the torso on Saturday by mystery assailants who attacked him at 4am in Belmore, Sydney (pictured, his coffin on Wednesday)
A blanket is seen draped over Iskander’s casket as family carry him to his grave, right next to one holding his uncle who was shot just a few weeks ago
There was a heavy police presence at the funeral in Sydney on Wednesday, with tensions high in the community
A hearse is seen carrying Iskander’s body on Wednesday as mourners gathered to remember the 23-year-old
The emotional and passionate imam addressed mourners loudly in an angry eulogy about violence and drug use in the Sydney Middle Eastern community.
‘They kill each other. Why? Why! It’s so harsh. This is our community. It’s wrong!’ the imam said.
‘He’s our brother. We’re watching this community fall apart. There is no limit with haram. what do you want me to say?
‘What are you talking about? Our daughters and our sons hooked on drugs. It has to stop.
‘We have betrayed each other. At the rate we’re going we’re going to need a hundred muftis.’
Police kept a watchful eye over the funeral on Wednesday (pictured) after a spate of deadly gangland killings
Some friends and family are seen at the funeral on Wednesday amid fears Sydney’s gangland war is only becoming more deadly
A group of women are seen among the mourners who came to remember Iskander on Wednesday, after he was killed in a fatal shooting on Saturday
With a very heavy police contingent in attendance, more than a hundred mourners including women wiping away tears gathered around the two side-by-side graves just after 11am.
As a Polair helicopter hovered overhead, a black hearse arrived at 11.20am and an imam supervised the lifting out of Iskander’s green coffin draped in a heavy black cloth inscribed with gold Arabic writing, which was carried to his grave.
Staring into the freshly dug plot as the coffin was placed down above it, mourners were led in prayers by the imam, who delivered an emotional eulogy about
Just after 11.30am, Iskander’s body was removed from his coffin and placed into the grave next to Ahmad’s.
The Raptor Task Force, Public Order & Riot Squad police, Highway Patrol, uniformed and plain-clothes officers and members of the new super task force Erebus which includes AFP and intelligence agents attended both the burial and an earlier ceremony.
Earlier, police kept watch at Lakemba Mosque where a service was held for Iskander around 10am.
Young men in traditional Islamic dress, but mostly clothed in leisurewear and designer tracksuits had arrived at the mosque, shielding their faces with hoods, balaclavas and scarves from police and waiting media.
Together in death: Rami Iskander, left, and his uncle, Mahmoud ‘Brownie’ Ahmad (above) enjoying a relaxing meal at an Asian restaurant just months before they were shot dead 17 days apart are both now interred in graves at Rookwood Cemetery
One man kept a watchful eye over proceedings as friends and family gathered to mourn Iskander, who is the latest victim of Sydney’s brutal gangland war
A mourner walks past police as they kept a careful eye on the proceedings, amid fears there will be reprisal attacks between gangs
Police vehicles cruised up and down the street outside the mosque as a man in a mortician’s apron and gloves emerged.
At 10.35am, Iskander’s green coffin was carried out from the mosque prayer room amid cheers and chanting and placed in the hearse.
At 10.45am, the hearse rolled out of the driveway and headed for the cemetery, tailed by a convoy of mourners in mostly black SUVs.
Iskander was gunned down outside his Belmore home in southwestern Sydney and died in front of his heavily pregnant wife and two-year-old child in the early hours of last Saturday morning.
His uncle was shot dead just 17 days earlier, also outside his home in Greenacre, in a hail of bullets by gunman who lay in wait to ambush him.
Iskander and Ahmad, 41, who enjoyed a close relationship despite their age difference had enjoyed a relaxing meal together just weeks before their execution-style murders.
Mourners are seen on Wednesday as Rami Iskander was laid to rest after being shot in the torso in Belmore on Saturday
At the time, Ahmad had a $1million bounty on his head and had been warned by the anti-gang Raptor Strike Force that his life was in grave danger following his release from prison after serving a sentence for killing a rival gang member,
Thirteen people have been killed in gang violence in Sydney’s west and southwest over the past 18 months.
The latest shooting happened on Saturday when the nephew of slain gangland figure Mahmoud ‘Brownie’ Ahmad was shot dead at his western Sydney home – the third fatal shooting in recent weeks.
A new police taskforce has been established to coordinate investigations into a spate of fatal shootings in Sydney involving rival organised crime gangs.
Detectives are chasing down three theories trying to explain why Iskander was killed, including whether or not his enemies were trying to prevent him from avenging his father’s death.
A group of women are seen among the mourners on Wednesday after the 23-year-old was gunned down outside his home
Taskforce Erebus will examine the circumstances and links between recent fatal shootings as well as dozens of acts of violence and the supply of prohibited drugs, illicit firearms, vehicle theft and various other criminal activities.
The taskforce brings together Australian Federal Police, detectives in southwest Sydney, the NSW Crime Commission and the Australian Criminal Intelligence Commission.
Assistant commissioner Michael Fitzgerald said he would be bringing down the full brunt of the police force to tackle the ongoing war between Sydney gangs.
‘These public acts of violence are dangerous and while they are targeted – regardless of who the victim is – it will not be tolerated. It only takes one stray bullet to injure or kill an innocent person,’ he told Daily Telegraph.
‘Police will not back down; we will continue to target anyone who shows a blatant disregard for community safety.’
The second theory being investigated by the taskforce is that Iskander was targeted in retaliation for the shooting of Comanchero boss Tarek, 41, and his brother Omar Zahed, 39, last Tuesday.
The pair were sprayed with bullets as they were leaving a BodyFit gym on Parramatta Road in Auburn, western Sydney.
Iskander is understood to have told friends that he was being wrongly blamed for the hit and that he had nothing to do with it.
The Ahmad family have also spoken through their lawyer Hisham Karnib to deny their family were involved in the shooting.
The third theory being investigated is that Iskander disrespected a person’s wife or girlfriend and was shot in retaliation.
Since October, police investigating criminal gangs have arrested 260 people and laid more than 840 charges.
SCC Director of Crime Operations, Detective Chief Superintendent Darren Bennett, says the focus continues to be on the links between organised criminal networks and those who associate with – and between – the groups.
‘We know the victims in these crimes associated in similar circles and this taskforce allows for centralised examination of how those connections relate to the shootings, and possible motivations,’ he said.
‘It also allows for expert co-ordination of resources and high-pressure targeting of the criminality at the centre of the shootings.’
A new taskforce has been set up to investigate the fatal shooting of the nephew of slain gangster Mahmoud Ahmad as police chase three theories to why he was killed
Shadow Police Minister Walt Secord blamed the NSW government for allowing the gang war to spiral out of control.
‘We have a situation in Western Sydney where gangland violence is running rampant,’ Mr Secord told ABC.
‘Police have lost control of the streets. It’s time the Premier acted. If this was happening in Sydney’s east or the north shore arrests would have been made a long time ago.’
State Crime Command Director detective chief superintendent Darren Bennett said police were dealing with a ‘spate of tit-for-tat shootings around organised criminals around southwest Sydney’.
‘We’ve clearly got a war-of-sorts in south-western Sydney around drug supply and organised crime,’ he said on Saturday.
Superintendent Bennett said Iskander was on a list of people under police surveillance.
‘We’ve got a list of people we focus on. This person who is now deceased, was part of that cabal,’ he said.
‘He’s not a person that we have warned about being a target as we have with others. But he is certainly known to us as being involved in that milieu.’
Police closed down Knox Street and set up a crime scene.
Moments following the shooting emergency services were called to help a pregnant woman who went into labour and an elderly man who suffered a fall.
One neighbour said they were woken up by the sound of gunshots.
‘My wife said did you hear that? I think that was gunshots,’ he told Daily Telegraph.
The first theory is that Iskander (pictured) could have been shot pre-emptively to stop him carrying out a revenge plot after his uncle Ahmad was gunned down on April 27
Police found a burned out car (pictured) parked in a nearby suburb following the shooting of Iskander in Belmore Saturday morning
Another neighbour said they heard ’10 gunshots’ before they saw a car speed away down the street.
A resident who is a nurse said they attempted to perform CPR on the 23-year-old man who had been shot.
Police found a burned out car parked in the nearby suburb of Croydon.
It is the second shooting in a week after Comanchero boss Tarek, 41, and his brother Omar Zahed, 39, were gunned down while leaving a BodyFit gym on Parramatta Road in Auburn, western Sydney, on Tuesday.
Tarek was shot up to 10 times and remains under police guard as he recovers in Westmead Hospital.
His brother Omar died at the scene and was laid to rest at Rookwood Cemetery on Friday.
State Crime Command Director detective chief superintendent Darren Bennett said police were dealing with a ‘spate of tit-for-tat shootings around organised criminals around south-west Sydney’ (pictured, police in Belmore where Iskander was shot)
Police officers and forensic specialists are seen at the scene on the morning of the attack on Iskander in Belmore on Saturday
Moments following the shooting emergency services were called to help a pregnant woman who went into labour and an elderly man who suffered a fall
Mourners, some wearing balaclavas, arrived at the gravesite and embraced Muslim friends and family of the slain man.
Among them was underworld identity, Ahmed Elomar, the brother of ISIS terrorist Mohamed Elomar.
Elomar told Daily Mail Australia that Omar’s fatal shooting was evidence of the ‘shocking state of affairs for young Muslim men in Sydney’.
‘This generation is all over the place,’ he said.
‘What happened, who knows?’.
Mr Elomar said he had been a good friend of Omar who he had known in and out of jail.
A former champion boxer, Elomar served three years in prison for assaulting a policeman at the infamous 2021 pro-Islamic State riots in Hyde Park.
Takek Zahed (seated) and his brother Omar (standing) were gunned down outside a gym in Sydney’s west on Tuesday night
The body of slain bikie associate Omar Zahed is carried from the back of a hearse to his grave at Rookwood Cemetery last week
A mourner, who did not want to be identified, told Daily Mail Australia that Tarek was ‘out of a coma, but still not talking’.
Police are investigating whether the brazen gangland hit may have been an inside job sparked by an internal power struggle within the Comanchero.
Police had warned the brothers as recently as Thursday last week that their lives were at risk, however their advice went unheeded.
Homicide Squad Commander Detective Superintendent Danny Doherty said police are investigating possible motives for the assassination attempt, refusing to rule out the possibility of an inside job.
‘We can’t discount an internal conflict,’ he told reporters.
‘There is opportunities for people to take their place and there’s a real power struggle within organised crime organisations.’
NSW Police established a new strike force to investigate the shootings.
Ahmad was fatally shot outside a Greenacre property after a $1million bounty was placed on his head