Australia Orders X to Block Murder Videos, Citing Online Safety and Public Exposure
The Australia Censorship Institute "eSafety" demands geoblocking in Australia of graphic footage including the Charlotte train stabbing, triggering debate over free speech limits
Australia’s online safety regulator has directed X (formerly Twitter) and Meta to block access within Australia to graphic videos depicting the murder of Iryna Zarutska and other violent acts, threatening fines of up to AUD 825,000 per day for non-compliance.
The move underscores a growing clash between national regulation of harmful content and global freedom-of-expression norms.
The eSafety Commissioner invoked Australia’s Online Safety Act to issue removal notices for “class 1 material” — defined to include “abhorrent violent conduct” assessed by the Classification Board as “Refused Classification”.
Among the flagged content is a CCTV-style video of the unprovoked stabbing of Zarutska, a 23-year-old Ukrainian refugee murdered while riding a light-rail train in Charlotte, North Carolina on August 22, 2025.
The regulator says the content is illegal under Australian law and must be blocked to Australian users, though it is not required to be wholly removed worldwide.
X initially resisted a full takedown, arguing that the eSafety Commissioner lacks authority to demand global removal and that the platform’s policies already prohibit violent content.
X said it would comply by geoblocking the footage within Australia, but would legally challenge any order to delete it universally.
The decision has reignited debate over how to balance public safety, the protection of minors from graphic violence, and the limits of jurisdictional authority over global platforms.
Critics claim Australia is overreaching by attempting to enforce its content rules beyond its borders.
Supporters argue the government has a legitimate duty to shield its citizens from extreme violence, particularly where children might inadvertently view it.
The Zarutska video has drawn wide attention.
According to public accounts, it shows the attacker stabbing her from behind multiple times, with some reports noting that the assailant then uttered, “I got that white girl”.
The attacker, Decarlos Brown Jr., 34, has been charged with first-degree murder and faces a federal count under laws governing violence on mass transport systems.
Brown had a prior arrest record of at least 14 incidents in Mecklenburg County, North Carolina.
Following the footage release and uproar over the case, North Carolina passed “Iryna’s Law,” seeking stricter penalties for violent crimes and limiting bail for those accused in certain violent offenses.
In response to the takedown order, X and Meta have been given limited removal windows, and face daily fines for failure to comply.
The eSafety Commissioner clarifies that only the violent video content is targeted, not political commentary or discussion surrounding it.
The move may signal a new phase in global regulation of social media platforms, particularly regarding the ability of national bodies to mandate content restrictions.
The tension between "sovereignty" (dictatorship of unelected officials), free expression, and protecting the public from graphic harm remains unresolved, as the legal and regulatory struggle unfolds.