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Premier labels pro-Palestine protesters who rallied at NGV ‘extremists' and ‘antisemitic'

Premier labels pro-Palestine protesters who rallied at NGV ‘extremists' and ‘antisemitic'

The Age3 days ago
Premier Jacinta Allan has labelled pro-Palestine protesters who rallied outside the National Gallery of Victoria on Sunday as 'extremists' who brought antisemitism to the streets of Melbourne.
The demonstrators are believed to have targeted the gallery, which was forced into lockdown, because of donations its received from well-known Jewish philanthropists John and Pauline Gandel.
Hundreds of activists marched through the city to the NGV on Sunday afternoon, and one witness reported being yelled at by protesters and accused of supporting Zionism and genocide by entering the gallery.
On Tuesday morning, Allan condemned the protest and said the demonstrators were shameful and 'cloaking their extremism under the conflict of the Middle East'.
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'Victorians are blessed to have the generosity of philanthropic generosity from families like the Gandels,' she said.
'That generosity, that philanthropy enriches us all, and that behaviour we saw where antisemitism came to the street on the National Gallery was just disgraceful.
'It is shameful behaviour and I condemn it because the generosity of the Gandels, it's enriched my family.
'Those people who choose to cloak their extremism under the conflict of the Middle East are shameful and should be condemned.'
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This is when the UN General Assembly's plenary session opens, when heads of state customarily give their speeches addressing the global themes of the day. Returning the perennial question of Palestine to the UN is poignant and highly symbolic, not least because this is where the conflict was exacerbated following a failed plan to create two states in 1947. To become a member of the UN — that most coveted of prizes — any applicant needs the support of both the Security Council and the General Assembly. Palestine is a permanent observer state at the UN but not a full member state because its previous two membership applications were vetoed by the United States, most recently in April 2024. If the UK and France follow through with their stated intentions in September, it will mean that four of the five permanent members of the Security Council recognise Palestine. Only the United States will remain. The issue is whether the United States will veto Palestine's third application for membership or abstain. It seems clear that the UK and France are paving the path for a collective act of recognition by Western liberal democracies by acting in concert and as a bloc. Whatever happens in September, one thing is clear: whether Palestine becomes a UN member or not, it will have been recognised as a state by nearly all UN members. Such a collective act of recognition will amount to a massive endorsement of Palestinian rights and hopefully go a long way toward ending the tired debate as to whether Palestine is a state. Victor Kattan is Assistant Professor in Public International Law at the University of Nottingham. He is the author of From Coexistence to Conquest: International Law and the Origins of the Arab-Israeli Conflict, 1891–1949, and the co-editor of Making Endless War: The Vietnam and Arab-Israeli Conflicts in the History of International Law, The Breakup of India and Palestine: The Causes and Legacies of Partition and Violent Radical Movements in the Arab World: The Ideology and Politics of Non-State Actors.

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