The Australian parliament on Thursday approved a bill to punish those responsible for the publication of violence similar to the one in New Zealand's Christchurch on the Internet, while official and popular fear of the spread of far-right ideas in Australia has increased.

News reports said the Australian government passed the text of the bill to parliament after the terrorist attack in Christchurch broadcast live images of its Facebook murder last month. Parliament approved the bill today and is awaiting approval in the Senate.

If the bill is passed, Web site administrators and social media platforms that broadcast material related to terrorist attacks will be subject to imprisonment or fines.

In a related context, Reuters revealed in a report the growing popularity of the right-wing Australian Laddes Association, which promotes the ideas of healthy life without drugs and exercise, as well as "steadfastness of eggs" and fear of Islam.

A few hours after the New Zealand massacre, the Facebook page of the society caught up with messages to celebrate, prompting the authorities to monitor the association, while it was not established whether the executor of the massacre had a relationship with the association.

The Facebook page was closed after Facebook targeted white nationalists in the wake of the massacre. The National Party (ruling coalition party) expelled 19 members of the al-Shabaab wing after discovering that they were connected to the Ladez association, saying it would expel all extremists from its ranks.

In New Zealand, police said today that the Australian bomber will face 50 counts of murder and 39 counts of attempted murder.

On the other hand, organizers of a national ceremony north of New Zealand's capital Wellington canceled a paragraph reciting a one-minute Islamic prayer in honor of the victims of the Christchurch massacre, where organizers received "shocking" threats from people who justified their position that the ceremony was only to "honor war-wounded soldiers."

The event is held annually, sponsored by New Zealand Veterans Organization, to honor New Zealand and Australian soldiers who died in the wars.

Organizers said they canceled the du'aa 'to ensure the safety of the party's preachers, but would honor the victims of the massacre through a speech to the mayor or a veteran.