Australian police have announced that the main suspect in the recent terrorist attack, the Bondi shooter, has been transferred from the hospital to a high-security prison.

Police confirmed that Naveed Akram, the suspect in the Bondi Beach shooting, was transferred from the hospital to a high-security prison after being charged with 59 counts.

Police and prison staff attended North Shore Hospital on Monday to transfer Akram, 24, to the Long Bay Correctional Facility in Malabar, Sydney.

A police spokesperson explained: "Officers from the Traffic and Highway Patrol, the Flying Police Unit, and the Riot Squad assisted the New South Wales Department of Corrections in transferring a 24-year-old inmate from North Shore Hospital to a correctional facility on Monday as part of Operation Shelter."

The New South Wales Department of Corrections confirmed Akram's detention. He will remain in custody at the high-security prison after being formally denied bail last week.

It is worth noting that this prison has previously held high-profile figures such as Ivan Milat, the accused Bundy shooter, who was placed in a medically induced coma last week after being shot in the abdomen.

It should be noted that the accused, Akram, awoke from his coma on Tuesday and was formally charged with 59 counts related to the horrific incident. His father, Sajid Akram, was also shot and killed by police.

Newly declassified court records released on Monday indicate that the father and son spent months planning the attack.

CCTV footage from outside the father's Airbnb-rented home allegedly shows the two men carrying weapons and explosives to their vehicle at approximately 2:14 a.m. on the day of the attack.

At approximately 6:50 p.m., Naveed and Sajid reportedly began removing weapons and ISIS flags from the truck before setting fire to a Hanukkah celebration on the beach.

A homemade explosive device was found inside a nearby car.

Investigations revealed that the suspects had been monitoring the shooting site for several days prior, specifically on December 12.

Mr. Akram will be held in custody pending his court appearance at a later date.

Also, the Australian state of Bondi is planning to ban the phrase "Globalize the Intifada" as part of a crackdown on "incendiary" slogans.

New South Wales Premier Chris Minns has called for a Royal Commission of Inquiry into the Bondi attack, the deadliest mass shooting in Australia in nearly 30 years.

The Premier confirmed he will seek to have the chant "Globalize the Intifada" classified as hate speech.

Two pro-Palestinian demonstrators were arrested on Wednesday for allegedly chanting slogans that included the word "Intifada" during a rally in central London.

The term "intifada" gained prominence during the Palestinian uprising against the Israeli occupation of the West Bank and Gaza Strip in 1987.

The Australian Security Intelligence Organisation (ASIO) stated that one of the shooters was on its watch list or radar, and that one of them had been investigated six years prior for links to an ISIS cell in Sydney.

The Joint Counter Terrorism Taskforce (JCTT) confirmed that the perpetrators had pledged allegiance to ISIS, classifying the attack as terrorism. ASIO Director-General Mike Burgess commented, "One of the perpetrators was known to us, but not in terms of an immediate threat, so obviously we need to investigate what happened."