
Victoria police criticised for Gaza protest tactics while thousands marched ‘freely' in Sydney
Tasnim Sammak from Free Palestine Coalition Naarm told Guardian Australia police did not inform protest organisers they were going to block the bridge before they arrived on Sunday afternoon.
Police had previously urged protesters to change their plans, claiming that blocking King Street Bridge – a major thoroughfare into Melbourne's CBD – could delay emergency services and put lives at risk.
Sammak estimated about 25,000 people protesting against the ongoing starvation in Gaza and demanding a ceasefire marched from the State Library of Victoria through the city to the bridge and were 'shocked' to be met by a 'heavy police presence'.
'It was a huge display of force by Victoria police against civilians and against members of the public who have been protesting for over 90 weeks in Melbourne,' Sammak said.
Images showed police in riot gear behind barricades on King Street Bridge, backed by a row of mounted officers and riot squad vans.
Sammak said protesters initially sat down at the bridge crossing, with footage showing fellow organiser Mohammad Sharab urging the crowd to remain calm.
'We are sitting here for Palestine … peacefully,' Sharab said.
'We have women, children, vulnerable people.'
Jordan van den Lamb, a Victorian Socialists candidate known online as PurplePingers, attended the protest. He said he was 'shocked' to turn on to King Street and see the bridge closed and police 'kitted out in riot gear, shields, horses, armoured vehicles, the lot'.
'I think they assumed that if they shut down the bridge, the protest would be less visible but really it's drawn more attention to the protest,' van den Lamb said.
'It would have just been done in half an hour if they hadn't closed the bridge. It's a bit stupid of them, really.'
Sign up: AU Breaking News email
He said police mostly stood silently behind their shields, with the main protest dispersing around 3pm as most attenders turned back towards the State Library.
A 'small group' wearing masks and goggles stayed, van den Lamb said. Footage shows the group stopped traffic, burnt an Australian flag and spray-painted 'Abolish Australia' on to Spencer Street.
In a statement, police said about 3,000 protesters gathered at the State Library on Sunday and 'despite repeated requests from police, they marched to King Street'.
'As a result of this, Victoria police closed the King Street Bridge and diversions were put in place,' the statement said.
Sign up to Breaking News Australia
Get the most important news as it breaks
after newsletter promotion
They confirmed there were no arrests but they were following up a report that an egg was thrown at a person during the protest.
Police did not answer specific questions about how many officers were deployed or the decision-making behind blocking the bridge, citing operational reasons. They said there had been no reports made to them of disruption to emergency services.
Sammak said protesters were left 'feeling very traumatised and confused' by the police response, suggesting it was made at the 'the encouragement' of the premier, Jacinta Allan.
'The Sydney Harbour Bridge was facilitated quite freely and easily, and there was a positive atmosphere. So why in Melbourne did we have to face riot cops?' Sammak said.
On Saturday, Allan had warned any protesters disrupting emergency services 'will be dealt with swiftly'. She defended her comments on Monday, telling ABC Radio Melbourne she had been focused on 'ensuring that safety wasn't compromised'.
Allan said the protest was peaceful and backed the police response. She also said there was 'a small group of extremists behaving in an extreme way'.
David Mejia-Canales, senior lawyer at the Human Rights Law Centre, said there had also been a heavy-handed response to Sydney's protest. On Saturday, NSW police had sought an order to prohibit the protest going ahead but it was rejected by the supreme court.
'In NSW and Victoria we are seeing how anti-protest laws from the Minns and Allan governments are emboldening heavy handed policing and the repressive treatment of protesters and attempts to shut down protests,' Mejia-Canales said.
'Governments and police have a legal obligation to protect protesters, not punish or hinder people who are peacefully demonstrating and exercising their human right to demand justice.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Mail
39 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Youngest Australian senator, 21, deletes 'cringe' video
Australia's youngest-ever senator has deleted a 'cringeworthy' video documenting a day in her life at Parliament, which was posted just a day after she outlined her bold agenda for the country's future. Charlotte Walker, 21, who made headlines last week after trading barbs with One Nation leader Pauline Hanson, shared a reel on Instagram documenting the final day of her first week in Parliament on July 24. The video, which was set to the Black Eyed Peas song 'Imma Be', featured time-stamped clips of the Senator for South Australia as her day unfolded. These included a clip under her duvet after waking up at 5.27am, various interviews with multiple broadcasters throughout the morning, footage of her running through the halls of Parliament to vote at 4pm, and flying home to SA at 6pm. 'Day in my life, first week done,' the senator, who earns $233,660 a year captioned the 16-second clip. But it was met with a chorus of ridicule and anger on social media, with many users branding it 'cringe,' 'embarrassing,' and evidence of taxpayers' money being wasted. 'An inexperienced young woman who's never held a real job as an adult is now a federal government Senator with the responsibilities of lawmaking in the federal Parliament,' one said. 'Why do Aussies keep electing unelectable people to Parliament? You won't trust a 21-year-old to a company's board of directors or to a Supreme Court justice bench as they don't have the capabilities, experience, and depth to handle it, but they can be elected to Parliament? This is so wrong. Parliament isn't some instagram hangout place, it's where the laws of the nation are discussed and legislated impacting an entire country's citizenry.' The criticism seems to have stung as the short clip has now vanished from Senator Walker's Instagram profile. The Daily Mail approached Senator Walker for comment over its removal. The clip was originally posted the day after Senator Walker's maiden speech in parliament where she pitched herself as a voice for the younger generations. The Senator for South Australia said that Labor's landslide election win in May was the expression of 'the core Australian value of a fair go'. She said that Labor would deliver a 'fair go' for Australians in the areas of housing, education and climate change - underlining the government's commitment to net zero carbon dioxide emissions by 2050 as a key pledge. It was on this issue that Senator Walker clashed with Pauline Hanson (pictured), who had tabled a motion in the upper house to abandon the target altogether, claiming it will 'destroy jobs and the Australian economy.' 'Power bills are out of control. Manufacturing is being wiped out. And ordinary Australians are paying the price, while out-of-touch politicians and inner-city idealists push fantasy policies they'll never have to live under,' Hanson said. But Senator Walker slammed the move, accusing the One Nation founder - who is 50 years her senior - of lacking knowledge of the subject. 'All I can say is, are you kidding?' Senator Walker said. 'The motion put forward on net zero indicates a severe lack of knowledge and a complete disregard for the future of our generation, the future of our country. 'Without a net zero target, there will be no Australian farmers, businesses or industries to support us. Net zero is waking up to a reality that Senator Hanson has not been able to grasp. In fact, Senator Hanson seems to be hellbent on exacerbating all of the consequences of climate change.' In turn, Senator Hanson lashed her younger colleague, claiming it was she who failed to understand what net zero really means. 'She's no sooner out of bloody university and out of her nappies than she's telling me I don't know what the hell I'm talking about when I've been on the floor of parliament for the last nine years,' Senator Hanson told Sky News. 'I don't take any notice of her, who's just trying to make her place in this parliament - and congratulations. But don't come in thinking that you're going to tell me what I know or what I don't know when I have been dealing with this for many years.' Senator Walker underlined her unwavering commitment to tackling climate change in her maiden speech, claiming that she spoke for the younger generation who would be most affected by a heating planet. 'The vast majority of young Australians do not talk about climate sceptics versus climate believers,' she said. 'To us, climate change is not a matter of faith or belief; it is purely a matter of hard fact, and this government is determined to do everything we can to meet our goals of the Paris Agreement, including holding the increase in average temperatures to well below two degrees Celsius of warming. This government's net zero plan is delivering on the legislated target of net zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2050.' She also outlined how Labor planned to tackle the 'cost-of-living monster that everyone my age talks about housing' by allowing people to buy a home with just a five per cent deposit. 'Saving a 20 per cent deposit to get into homeownership whilst paying rent is an unscalable mountain for most of us,' she said. 'The median home price in Australia today is $820,000. Five per cent of that is $41,000. The last time $41,000 covered the 20 per cent deposit for a median home was in 2002. I wasn't even born in 2002.


The Guardian
39 minutes ago
- The Guardian
Panthers trainer banned and club fined $50,000 by NRL for controversial blunder
Penrith Panthers have defended the actions of trainer Corey Bocking after the NRL proposed huge penalties for a controversial incident at the climax of Saturday's clash against the Gold Coast. Bocking ran in front of Titans halfback Jayden Campbell during the kicker's preparations for a conversion attempt which would have made the Titans' lead four points with less than seven minutes to go. Campbell's ensuing miss left the door open for a late two-point drop goal from Nathan Cleary to send the game to golden point. The Panthers finished 30-26 winners. The NRL issued a breach notice to the Panthers on Monday, proposing to suspend Bocking for five matches and demanding the club pay a $50,000 fine. The club has five days to formally respond, but issued a statement on Monday seeking to explain Bocking's error. 'The club is adamant that the actions of the trainer were an honest mistake and there was no intent to breach the rules or gain an advantage. The trainer immediately apologised upon realising the error,' it said. 'The circumstances involved a late change and in-the-moment confusion, but we understand that does not excuse the outcome.' The NRL alleges Bocking 'unnecessarily interfered with and distracted' Campbell as he was attempting a conversion kick in breach of the NRL operations manual and code of conduct. It also noted the proposed penalty 'takes into account previous breaches by Penrith Panthers trainers'. Another Panthers trainer was banned for a week in May after squirting a ball with water during a match. Panthers coach Ivan Cleary said after the game it was an 'honest mistake' and both Hocking and club had apologised. 'He's just in the wrong place at the wrong time,' Cleary said, explaining he had just changed his mind on an interchange and Bocking was involved in the confusion. Titans coach Des Hasler said he had to be 'careful' about his choice of words, but ultimately said the incident probably didn't cost his side the game. Bocking will miss the rest of the regular season if the club accepts the breach notice as the Panthers chase a place in the top four in their bid for a fifth-straight premiership. Meanwhile, players from Wests Tigers, who surprised Canterbury-Bankstown on Sunday in a 28-14 upset, are also being investigated by the NRL after they made hand gestures considered offensive in Arab cultures after scoring a second half try. 17% of the population of the Bankstown area has a Lebanese background according to the 2021 ABS Census, and the club hosts an Iftar event with fans each year.


The Guardian
39 minutes ago
- The Guardian
Footage of Erin Patterson dumping food dehydrator released weeks after guilty murder verdicts
Footage of Erin Patterson dumping a food dehydrator at a local tip and handing a mobile phone to police has been released by the Victorian supreme court, almost a month after she was found guilty of murdering and attempting to murder her estranged husband's family. Both sets of footage were tendered as exhibits during Patterson's trial, but only were released to the media on Monday. The footage was taken from the Koonwarra Transfer Station CCTV and from a police officer filming the execution of a search warrant at Patterson's Leongatha home. Both events happened in August 2023, the week immediately after Patterson served a lunch of beef wellington laced with death cap mushrooms that fatally poisoned Don and Gail Patterson, the parents of her estranged husband Simon, and Heather Wilkinson, Gail's sister. Ian Wilkinson, Gail's husband, survived. Patterson can be seen on the footage taking the Sunbeam food dehydrator, which is in its box, and placing it in an area for electronic waste disposal. The dehydrator – described during the trial as 'the murder weapon' – was later recovered by police, and found to contain traces of death cap mushrooms, and Patterson's fingerprints. The footage taken from inside her home shows Patterson sitting at her dining room table and handing over a mobile phone to a detective at the conclusion of an almost four-hour search of the property. It was later alleged that Patterson did not hand police her main mobile phone at this time, but another device which she had recently factory reset, and would reset again over the following hours. It was alleged her main phone was never recovered by police.