![]() |
| Marchers defied government warnings about coronavirus to rally in Sydney (AFP Photo/SAEED KHAN) |
Tens of thousands of Australians defied government calls to stay at home Saturday by spilling onto the streets for Black Lives Matter protests in major towns and cities across the country.
Marchers in
Sydney, Melbourne and elsewhere rejected arguments from law enforcement and
conservative leaders that mass protests could fuel the spread of coronavirus.
A court on
Friday declared the Sydney protest illegal on health grounds, although the
ruling was overturned by an appeals court minutes before the march was due to
start.
"The
fact that they have tried to push us all back and stop the protest, it makes
people want to do it even more," said Jumikah Donovan, one of thousands
who turned up thinking the ban was still in place.
The Sydney
march of at least 20,000 was largely peaceful but as night fell a smaller group
of a few hundred protesters faced-off with police over two hours.
A large number of police eventually forced them into a nearby railway station where a tense stand-off ended with police using pepper spray on the crowd.
![]() |
Protesters
were also out in force in Brisbane (AFP Photo/Patrick HAMILTON)
|
A large number of police eventually forced them into a nearby railway station where a tense stand-off ended with police using pepper spray on the crowd.
Police
confirmed only three arrests during the rally.
Demonstrators
brandished signs that read "I can't breathe", a nod to the last words
of African-American man George Floyd, whose death while being arrested has
sparked civil rights protests around the world.
Another
read: "Same story, different soil."
The
movement has resonated strongly with many in Australia -- a country also
wrestling with the legacy of a racist past.
Organisers
said they hoped to draw attention to high imprisonment rates among Aboriginal
Australians and the large number of deaths in custody of indigenous people --
more than 400 in the last three decades.
![]() |
Many
protesters wore face masks, brought hand sanitiser and tried to social
distance
(AFP Photo/Patrick HAMILTON)
|
No
prosecutions have been brought despite dozens of investigations, inquests and
in some cases video evidence of abuse.
'Voice
for change'
Many of the
protesters wore face masks, brought hand sanitiser and tried to social distance
as best they could.
"There
are things in the world that need to be addressed," said Fay Goli.
"If a majority can stand together there will be a stronger voice for
change."
Australia
has seen a sustained drop in the number of COVID-19 cases, but social
distancing rules remain in force and mass gatherings are not permitted.
"Police
are prepared for anybody that wants to just flout the law," New South
Wales Police Minister David Elliott told media before the rallies.
![]() |
(AFP Photo/Andrew LEESON)
|
Protesters
in Melbourne were warned they could face fines for attending a rally if social
distancing was not observed, although police appeared not to be enforcing those
rules.
The day
before the protests Prime Minister Scott Morrison had urged people to stay
home.
"Let's
find a better way and another way to express these sentiments rather than
putting your own health at risk," Morrison said.
He admitted
there was more to be done to address indigenous inequality, but rejected
parallels with the United States.
"Let's
deal with this as Australians and not appropriate what's happening in other
countries to our country at this time," he said.




No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.