
Sydney Harbour Bridge protest: Police issue brutal warning to pro-Palestine protesters as thousands prepare to march across the global landmark
Thousands of demonstrators are expected to attend the rally to highlight what the United Nations has described as 'worsening famine conditions' in Gaza.
Police on Saturday implored those planning to take part to act peacefully and respectfully, warning them they would be closely monitored.
Supreme Court Justice Belinda Rigg rejected an application on behalf of the NSW police commissioner to shut down the Sunday march on public safety grounds.
Organised by the Palestinian Action Group Sydney, the protest has garnered support from activists nationwide, human rights and civil liberties groups as well as several MPs and public figures such as former Socceroo Craig Foster.
Justice Rigg said in her judgment that arguments the rally would cause disruption were not sufficient to bar the protest.
'It is in the very nature of the entitlement to peaceful protest that disruption will be caused to others,' she said.
She noted there was significant support for the march from hundreds of organisations including Amnesty International, various churches, the Jewish Council of Australia, the nurses and midwives association and other trade unions.
The decision means protesters will have legal immunity and protections around offences like blocking or obstructing traffic or pedestrians.
Police were 'scrambling' to alert road users that the bridge would be closed for the protest but would have the 'whole gamut' of officers there to monitor the demonstration, acting deputy commissioner Peter McKenna said.
'We are there to keep everyone safe ... we will have police right along the route and we'll be making sure this is done as safely and peacefully as possible,' he told reporters on Saturday.
'Anyone who thinks they're going to come along and hijack this protest or do the wrong thing, police will take swift action.'
Greens MP Sue Higginson described the court decision as a win for humanity and a defeat for the 'anti-protest Minns Labor government'.
'The court was crystal clear that a protest being inconvenient does not mean it can be stopped. In fact, that's the whole point of the protest,' she said.
Protesters are expected to march from the CBD to North Sydney, with the bridge closed from 11.30am to about 4pm.
Police Minister Yasmine Catley urged people to avoid the city if possible.
'Make no mistake there is going to be massive, massive disruption ... there will be significant delays,' she said.
'But we believe police will be able to handle the protest on the bridge so long as people are peaceful, that they listen to what police ask them to do and that they are sensible.'
In solidarity with their interstate peers, protesters in Melbourne are also gearing up to rally through the city's CBD, aiming to reach the King Street Bridge.
Executive Council of Australian Jewry CEO Alex Ryvchin said there was 'a lot of dismay in the community and wider society that a single judge has overruled a decision of the police and the elected government made in the interests of public safety'.
Meanwhile, more than 60 per cent of Australians want tougher government measures to stop Israel's military offensive in Gaza, a poll has found.
Respondents to the YouGov survey published on Friday and commissioned by the Australian Alliance for Peace and Human Rights believe Prime Minister Anthony Albanese's condemnations of Israel have fallen short.
More than 60,000 Palestinians have been killed including more than 17,000 children, according to local health authorities, with reports of dozens of people dead in recent weeks due to starvation.
Israel's campaign began after Hamas attacked Israel on October 7, 2023, reportedly killing 1200 people and taking 250 hostages.
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BBC News
2 hours ago
- BBC News
Man remanded in custody over Palestine Action RAF break-in
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The Guardian
3 hours ago
- The Guardian
We know the Sydney Harbour Bridge march against the killing in Gaza was huge – but just how big was it?
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He said it was the largest protest he and the assistant police commissioner Adam Johnson had seen in their time in the force. Johnson also said it was the 'most perilous' in his '35 years of policing'. However organisers estimated it was closer to 300,000. 'It's even bigger than my wildest dreams,' one of the main protest organisers, Josh Lees, said while at the front of the march at the midway point. Lees later said a number of people had come up with a similar figure after crunching the numbers based on widely shared aerial footage. Dr Aldo Raineri, a senior CQUniversity lecturer and expert in crowd safety management, estimated the figure to be significantly higher than what police suggested. Guardian Australia shared drone footage with Raineri that showed the crowd just north of the bridge's midway point, extending back to Wynyard station and Lang Park, where the march began. Sign up: AU Breaking News email The distance from Wynyard station up to where protesters began to be turned back is approximately 2.5km. The roadway along the bridge is 30 metres wide. Based on these dimensions and what appeared to be an occupancy of three or four people per square metre, he estimated between 225,000 and 300,000 people attended. However, he noted 'these figures are really rough, given the variation in density'. Organisers said there were still people at Lang Park, who had not yet started to march, when police sent a message telling protesters to turn back. Lees said many who had gone to Sunday's protest felt it was on par with past major protests they had been to, including the anti-Iraq war protest in 2003, which saw demonstrators march through the CBD, and the walk for reconciliation march in 2000 which went across the Sydney Harbour Bridge. According to the National Museum of Australia, about 250,000 people walked across the bridge in a continuous stream lasting nearly six hours during the reconciliation march. NMA called it the 'largest political demonstration ever held in Australia'. In 2003, police estimated more than 200,000 took part in the anti-Iraq war rally, while organisers put the total at about 300,000, the Sydney Morning Herald reported. The paper said it was 'thought to be the biggest in the country's history'. In 2023, an estimated 50,000 people took part in a march across the Sydney Harbour Bridge as part of WorldPride. Chris Nash, who attended Sunday's march, said it 'felt much bigger' than the 2000 reconciliation march he also attended. 'That was much more spaced out,' he said. The former NSW premier Bob Carr marched at the head of the pro-Palestine protest across the bridge. He was the premier during the reconciliation march in 2000. Asked how the crowd sizes compared, he said: 'All that matters was that it was a big, beautiful success. A success with cheerful police cooperation and good-natured people motivated by the horror of Israel's actions in Gaza.' At about 3pm on Sunday, NSW police sent out a mass text message throughout the city ordering the pro-Palestine march to stop due to safety concerns, with authorities turning protesters around at the north end of the bridge. Police sent a second mass text message saying they had consulted with the organisers and were turning everyone around. 'We could not get those people, the number, the significant size of that crowd off that northern egress route without risking crowd crush. We could not allow those numbers to then egress into the northern side, into those train stations without, again, that real risk of crowd crush,' McKenna told reporters. He said there were 1,000 police facilitating the protest. Raineri said allowing the crowd to amass without effective transport to disperse them would have been unsafe. He said the police went about this the right way by using mass text messages and consultating with protesters. However, Legal Observers NSW said the 'confusing and unplanned' directions from police were dangerous and could have caused a crowd crush. 'Police had not adequately planned for the initial route to North Sydney and there did not appear to be a plan if crowd numbers exceeded expectations and made entering and leaving North Sydney difficult,' the group's report on the protest said.


Daily Mail
3 hours ago
- Daily Mail
How resurgent Antifa brought violence to the streets of London by hijacking Corbynite and socialist 'pro-migrant' demonstration before clashing with anti-asylum seeker protesters
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Several hundred protesters waved Union Jack flags and banners, with some chanting: 'Get these scum off our street.' But a huge counter protest, organised by Stand Up To Racism, was announced beforehand, with Jeremy Corbyn - the MP for Islington North - urging activists to join. Stand Up To Racism, who has mobilised its activists at several anti-migrant hotel protests in recent weeks, were joined by other groups including Finsbury Park Mosque and Islington Labour Party. What appeared to be yet another anti-migrant versus anti-racism demonstration flared up when protesters from the Central London Anti-Fascists arrived at the hotel. Posters put up across the capital beforehand by the group were titled 'Anti-Fascist Action. Kick the racists out of London. Call out by Central London Anti-Fascists.' 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The Met Police confirmed to the Daily Mail that it made nine arrests at the protest - eight of whom were counter-protesters. In forming up outside the conditioned area and marching into the junction between the two areas where protest was permitted, they were in breach of the conditions. People believed to be migrants were seen filming and laughing as protesters and counter-demonstrators clashed in the streets of Islington today A spokesman said: 'A 22-year-old woman was arrested for expressing support for Palestine Action. 'A further three men, aged 30, 21 and 28 and three women, aged 43, 33 and 21 were arrested for breaching the Public Order Act conditions in place. 'A 21-year-old man was arrested for breaching the Public Order Act conditions in place and also for 2 x assaulting an emergency worker.' One anti-migrant protester, a 33-year-old man, was arrested for a racially aggravated public order offence. 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