Australian anti-lockdown protestors clash with police amid new restrictions after just 176 new cases
Australian anti-lockdown protestors violently clash with police and yell anti-vaxxer slogans in rallies across the country in response to harsh new restrictions after just 176 new daily infections
- Thousands of protesters have marched in Sydney and Melbourne in backlash over strict lockdowns
- Protesters chanted ‘freedom’, held up placards, and were not wearing masks or practising social distancing
- Police were out in force to meet the protesters with mounted officers present and multiple arrests
- Australia has seen a small uptick in cases with 176 new infections on Saturday across the entire country
<!–
<!–
<!–<!–
<!–
(function (src, d, tag){
var s = d.createElement(tag), prev = d.getElementsByTagName(tag)[0];
s.src = src;
prev.parentNode.insertBefore(s, prev);
}(“https://www.dailymail.co.uk/static/gunther/1.17.0/async_bundle–.js”, document, “script”));
<!–
DM.loadCSS(“https://www.dailymail.co.uk/static/gunther/gunther-2159/video_bundle–.css”);
<!–
Anti-lockdown marches have erupted across Australia with tens of thousands of maskless protesters lining the streets of Melbourne and Sydney, amid fears the rallies could act as devastating Covid super-spreading events.
The protests are a response to harsh Covid lockdowns in New South Wales, Victoria and South Australia, with more than half the country’s 25million people ordered to stay at home over an outbreak which began in Sydney.
The severe restrictions have been imposed in response to a small rise in cases, which saw 176 new infections across the entire country registered on Saturday.
Frenzied crowds shouting ‘freedom’ and anti-vaccine conspiracy slogans swarmed Haymarket city centre from midday on Saturday, just moments after local health chief Jeremy McAnulty declared the area a virus hotspot.
Officers confirmed a number of arrests had been made after objects were thrown, while others were seen punching police horses.
One group of five protesters told Daily Mail Australia they’d travelled from the epicentre of the new outbreak, just for the rally.
‘We don’t give a f*** mate, this lockdown is killing us,’ one said.
Protesters throw plastic bottles and plants at mounted police at Sydney Town Hall during the ‘Worldwide Rally For Freedom’ anti-lockdown rally in Australia on Saturday
A bloodied man is detained by police during the violent clashes sparked by harsh new lockdown measures in response to rising Covid cases
The severe restrictions have been imposed in response to a small rise in cases, which saw 176 new infections across the entire country registered on Saturday
A protesters tries to punch a police horse during the ugly scenes of unrest as thousands gathered to demonstrate against the stay-at-home orders
Protesters are arrested by the police at Sydney Town Hall during the rally at Hyde Park as Australia imposed new lockdown measures
Chaos in Australia: Tens of thousands swarmed George Street in Sydney for an anti-lockdown protest on Saturday in response to new restrictions
The streets of Melbourne were flooded with protesters, with some letting off orange flares as others clashed with police
Essential exercise? Two women wearing activewear were spotted in the middle of a chanting crowd in Victoria Park, where the rally began before moving through to the CBD
Mounted police and riot squad officers were seen trying to contain chanting crowds and direct the flow of protesters as traffic backed up along the city’s busiest road.
Dozens of protesters climbed the roof of a Woolworths store and nearby train station, some holding signs reading: ‘Western Sydney Lives Matter’.
Police told the crowd gathered outside Town Hall about 2.40pm that they need to disperse if they ‘don’t want to get pepper sprayed’.
One Sydney resident took to Twitter about midday to say she witnessed protesters and police clashing outside her house.
‘Stepped outside my house in Chippendale five mins ago… assuming this is an anti-lockdown protest that police diverted from Broadway,’ the woman wrote.
NSW Police Minister confirmed 57 people were charged after attending Sydney’s protest and a strike-force has been established to investigate who was in attendance.
‘What we saw today was 3,500 very selfish boofheads — people that thought the law didn’t apply to them,’ Mr Elliott said.
Police confirmed they made a number of arrests at the wild protest in Sydney which began at Victoria Park
A line of police officers outside Flinders Street station in Melbourne faced off against enraged protesters
Protesters were met by mounted police outside Town Hall in Sydney (pictured) with no group prepared to back down
One anti-lockdown protester is detained by police during the scenes of unrest in Victoria Park in Sydney on Saturday amid the chaos
The protesters in their thousands make their way through the Sydney CBD on Saturday afternoon (pictured)
The crowds threw ink at one officer (pictured) as he was stationed next to the a barrier in the Sydney CBD
More than 1,000 people have also gathered in Melbourne’s CBD on Saturday afternoon – with flares lit outside Victoria’s Parliament House.
Police formed a barrier on the corner of Flinders and Swanston Streets in the CBD where they held back the crowd chanting ‘you work for us’.
Mounted officers told the group to disperse with a numbers of protesters being detained.
In Brisbane hundreds of people turned out the to the city’s botanic gardens refusing to wear masks in an anti-lockdown protest.
A car rally is also planned for locked-down Adelaide, with police warning they will make arrests over unlawful activity.
Stunned Sydneysiders took to social media to describe the protests in their city.
‘Protest stretches right down Broadway! Absolutely massive turnout,’ one demonstrator said.
Shocked onlookers feared the rally could spell disaster for Sydney’s Delta outbreak.
‘The Sydney anti-lockdown protest is a superspreader event in the making. If the sheer number of people wasn’t enough, everyone is also screaming at the top of their lungs (without masks) and potentially spreading droplets all over the damn place,’ one said.
‘These people are protesting the lockdowns. Obviously because they don’t want to be Locked down,’ said another.
‘So they decide to protest, breathing on each other, spreading Covid, causing the positive cases and spread to rise, which therefore extends the lockdown they are protesting?’
One person added the most well behaved of Sydney’s protests appeared to be in the centre of the city.
‘Actual mostly peaceful anti lockdown protests going on in the heart of Sydney right now,’ the woman wrote to Twitter.
One woman held her phone out to film the chaotic scenes in Victoria Park as protesters clashed with police
Protesters and police clash in the Sydney CBD with reports police had deployed pepper spray as the crowd grew increasingly unruly (pictured)
Protesters were seen in Melbourne holding anti-vaccination and anti-lockdown signs, including ‘I don’t consent’ and ‘Covid is a scam’
The thousand strong crowd of protesters outside Melbourne’s iconic Flinder Streets station (pictured)
Flares were let off in the streets of Melbourne as the frenzied crowd continued to march in the city’s CBD
Anti-vax and proud: Some of the protesters were seen wearing ‘unvaxxed and unafraid’ jumpers
Protesters were chanting ‘freedom’ as they marched through Sydney streets and held placards – the majority not wearing masks or practicing any kind of social distancing.
Some of those attending were also reportedly setting off fireworks and brandishing fire twirling sticks.
A father and son from Fairfield told Daily Mail Australia they’d travelled from Sydney’s Covid ground-zero to the CBD to be a part of the rally, insisting they ‘aren’t scared of police’.
Another protester, wearing a face shield, said he wasn’t anti-mask but was anti-lockdown.
‘I’m against lockdowns, they’re killing my business,’ he told Daily Mail Australia.
‘That’s why we’re all here.’
Another person said their friend was pepper sprayed by police.
Thousands of protesters not wearing masks stand in front of a line of police in front of Town Hall in Sydney (pictured)
There were reports protesters had fireworks and that police (pictured) were deploying pepper spray
The protesters (pictured) marched from Victoria Park to Town Hall in the CBD were they were met by mounted police
Protesters sung out the Australian national anthem as the near 10,000-strong made their way past Central Station.
NSW Health Minister Brad Hazzard urged Sydneysiders to avoid attending the rally on Saturday.
‘We live in a democracy and normally I am certainly one who supports people’s right to protest, but I actually think it is really silly,’ he said on Saturday.
NSW Police Deputy Commissioner Gary Worboys earlier warned a lockdown protest in Sydney would be ‘disastrous’ .
‘It’s not really the time for people to come together closely, to exercise somewhat they would think was their democratic right and it may well be,’ he said.
‘NSW Police are in a position where they will try and work with the organisers and the specific group leaders to make sure that they comply with the public health orders, and in fact we don’t get a situation where we end up with a spreading event in Sydney which would, of course, be disastrous’.
One woman in Melbourne was pictured handing out flowed to the line of police in the city’s CBD
One man appears pleased with himself after being escorted from the protests by police (pictured) on Saturday
‘At the present time we’ve got cases going through the roof, and we have people thinking that it’s OK to get out there and possibly be close to each other at a demonstration. I just think that’s a bit silly.’
The protesters in Sydney marched from Victoria Park to Town Hall in the central business district on Saturday.
They broke through a police barrier to continue down George St but were stopped at King St by a heavy police presence, including mounted police and riot officers.
Protesters threw plastic bottles and plants taken from the street at officers, and several arrests have been made.
Signs carried by the protesters call for ‘freedom’ and ‘the truth’.
The protest comes as Covid-19 case numbers in NSW reached another record high since the first wave in 2020.
Some 163 new local cases were reported in the 24 hours to 8pm on Friday, up from 136 the day before.
Greater Sydney has been locked down for the past four weeks, with residents only able to leave home with a reasonable excuse.
There are fears the dense crowds in Sydney (pictured) and Melbourne would cause the virus case number to surge
Melbourne CBD traffic was brought to a halt as the protesters flooded through the streets (pictured)
In Melbourne, hundreds of police officers are stationed in CBD amid concerns it could thwart Victoria’s efforts to emerge from restrictions.
A rally involving a few hundred people could involve flares and the blocking of an inner-city bridge, Chief Commissioner of Police Shane Patton said on Friday.
‘Where you have the vast majority of Victorians doing the right thing, sitting at home, it’s such a sense of entitlement to say ‘I can go out and protest just because I disagree’ and potentially breach all of the CHO guidelines and spread the virus,’ he told 3AW.
Signs were displayed the crowd including many saying they ‘unmasked and unvaccinated’ (pictured)
Under Sydney’s current lockdown public gatherings are not allowed with outdoor exercise limited to groups of two
Mounted police in Sydney with hi-vis and protective headgear which was also fitted to their horses (pictured)
Police made a number of arrests on Saturday (pictured) with the crowds breaking Public Health Orders
Police escort one man away from the crowd (pictured). They protest was held illegally as no authorisation was submitted and crowds were in breach of health directives
Victorian Premier Daniel Andrews labelled the idea of protesting lockdown ‘ridiculous’.
‘Protest against this virus by staying at home, following the rules and getting out of lockdown,’ he said.
Victoria has added a new category to its interstate travel permit system, designating all of NSW a COVID-19 ‘extreme risk zone’, as the southern state recorded 12 new locally acquired coronavirus cases.
Chief Health Officer Brett Sutton made the ‘extreme risk zone’ declaration late on Friday, effective from 11.59pm.
‘If people enter Victoria from an extreme risk zone without an exemption, they will be put on a return flight or placed in 14 days mandatory hotel quarantine. Exemptions will only be granted in exceptional circumstances,’ the state health department said.
Victorians who have been in NSW in the past 14 days and are wishing to return home can only do so with an exemption or other valid permit, such as a Specified Worker Permit.
The crowd in Sydney started the day at Victoria Park (pictured) and then made their way into the city
One man displays a Eureka Stockade flag as he marches through Victoria Park (pictured)
Protesters as Victoria Park held signs demanding freedom from lockdowns imposed to kerb an outbreak of Coronavirus
Officers escort a man through Victoria Park on Saturday about midday (pictured)
Multiple arrests were made (pictured) with the crowd growing increasingly unruly as the day went on
Some of the group held signs reading ‘No tests, no cases, no lockdown’ as the city struggles to contain an outbreak of the delta variant of Covid
Red zone designations still apply to the ACT, South Australia and Norfolk Island.
The order follows Premier Daniel Andrews’ unsuccessful pitch at national cabinet on Friday to put a ‘ring of steel’ around Sydney.
The concept, involving a police guard around the city to stop anyone leaving, was used during Melbourne’s lengthy second lockdown in 2020, in order to protect regional areas and other states from infection.
However after the national cabinet meeting Prime Minister Scott Morrison argued such a strategy was unnecessary because stay-at-home rules were enough to rein in the virus.
Two police in masks talk to a woman attending the rally on Saturday (pictured)
Sydney’s streets were filled with protesters many of whom held signs or wore t-shirts that said ‘Covid is a scam’ (pictured)
Some of the protesters wore masks but were not practicing social distancing (pictured)
Victoria recorded 12 new locally acquired COVID-19 infections on Saturday, 10 of which were in quarantine throughout their entire infectious period. All infections are linked to current outbreaks.
The figures continue the state’s encouraging downward trend in new diagnoses – having recorded 14 cases on Friday and 26 on Thursday.
The numbers come with 19,281 vaccine doses administered in the past 24 hours in Victoria and 39,846 COVID tests conducted.
Victoria’s current set of restrictions – its fifth lockdown – are scheduled to be eased on July 27 but Mr Andrews says health authorities want more data before making a decision.
The protests began at Victoria Park with some of those attending being led away by police early on in the rally (pictured)
The crowd meets a blockade of police officers some with horses (pictured)
A man protesting the lockdown brought in to contain the spread of the delta variant of Covid is led away by police at Victoria Park (pictured)
Meanwhile, police are preparing to deal with an anti-lockdown protest planned for Melbourne on Saturday and are concerned it could thwart the state’s efforts to emerge from restrictions.
A rally involving a few hundred people could involve flares and the blocking of an inner-city bridge, Chief Commissioner of Police Shane Patton said on Friday.
‘Where you have the vast majority of Victorians doing the right thing, sitting at home, it’s such a sense of entitlement to say ‘I can go out and protest just because I disagree’ and potentially breach all of the CHO guidelines and spread the virus,’ he told 3AW.
A line of police in Melbourne stands their ground against protesters on Flinders Street (pictured)
Police (pictured) were aware of the protests beforehand but they had no approval lodged after the application was withdrawn