Major update on Ashlee Good’s baby daughter, who was injured in Bondi Junction Westfield stabbing in Sydney

A nine-month-old baby injured in a horrific stabbing attack at Westfield Bondi Junction in Sydney on Saturday has been moved out of the Intensive Care Unit (ICU).

The baby girl’s mother, Ashlee Good was one of six people killed in the attack, with another dozen people injured.

The little girl suffered chest and arm injuries in the attack and rushed to Sydney Children’s Hospital at Randwick for emergency surgery, where she remains in a serious but stable condition on a ward.

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A GoFundMe has been created to support the baby, which has raised almost $450,000.

Six patients remain in hospital, a NSW Health spokesperson confirmed on Tuesday.

Patients were taken to St Vincent’s Hospital, the Royal Prince Alfred Hospital and the Royal North Shore Hospital following the attack.

Two women remain in the ICU, one in a serious condition and one in a serious but stable condition.

A third woman is in a stable condition on a ward.

Two men are in stable conditions on a ward.

Pikria Darchia, Ashlee Good, Dawn Singleton and Jade Young have been identified as four of six people killed in the Bondi attack. Credit: Supplied

Five women and one man were killed when Joel Cauchi hunted down shoppers in a terrifying rampage before he was shot dead by police officer Amy Scott.

Authorities have confirmed Cauchi was likely targeting women in the attack.

His victims have been identified as 38-year-old Good, an osteopath turned account executive at DocuSign who had just returned from maternity leave; Dawn Singleton, the 25-year-old daughter of multimillionaire businessman John Singleton and e-commerce assistant at White Fox Boutique; 47-year-old architect Jade Young; 30-year-old security guard Faraz Tahir, student Yixuan Cheng and 55-year-old artist and designer Pikria Darchia.

GoFundMe campaigns have also been created for Young and Tahir’s families.

NSW Premier Chris Minns said a special coronial inquiry would examine the circumstances of Cauchi’s “horrifying, vile act”.

The inquiry, bolstered by up to $18 million in extra funding, would look at the police response, as well as the killer’s interactions with NSW and Queensland agencies.

Minns said while Cauchi’s motives may never be truly known, it is “the truth of the matter” that many women were targeted in the attack.

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