
Thousands pour onto iconic bridge for Gaza
On a wet and windy Sunday, hundreds of Palestinian flags could be seen fluttering in the breeze as protesters marched to spotlight suffering in Gaza.
Rally organiser Palestine Action Group intends to draw attention to what the United Nations has described as worsening famine conditions in Gaza, as police flagged concerns of crowd crush.
Police sought an order to prohibit the protest but Supreme Court Justice Belinda Rigg rejected the application on Saturday.
With increasing concerns for public safety, the force has since permitted protesters to walk back southbound across the bridge to the Sydney CBD after the march was initially proposed to end in North Sydney's Bradfield Park.
The bridge will remain closed to motorists for most of Sunday and the metro is out of commission with scheduled repairs.
Several Labor MPs including former NSW Labor premier and former federal foreign minister Bob Carr joined the march in defiance of Premier Chris Minns alongside multiple Greens and independent colleagues.
The premier previously warned the city would "descend into chaos" if the protest went ahead.
In a statement, Mr Carr said Australians "want the Netanyahu government's humanitarian blockade to stop, the starvation and the killing to end".
WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange joined Mr Carr at the rally.
First time protesters and friends Ian Robertson, 74, and Greg Mullins, 66, said they hoped their attendance could make a difference.
"The world's gone mad," Mr Mullins told AAP.
"I came today because I don't want my kids telling me what were you doing when this mass murder and genocide was going on," Mr Robertson added.
"It's horrific and awful, we can't bear watching it."
Acting Police Assistant Commissioner Adam Johnson earlier warned police would take swift action against anyone who sought to hijack the peaceful protest.
"That's our message all the time, whether it's a public assembly or not.
"I'm talking about anyone, I'm not talking about the actual protesters specifically, but anyone, that people are expected to obey the law."
Mr Johnson also raised safety concerns, citing the rainy conditions and the number of demonstrators.
"Crowd crush is a real thing ... but in this case, the risk is the numbers are unknown," he said.
An estimated 25,000 are believed to be on the ground in Sydney, NSW Police told AAP.
Federal Opposition leader Sussan Ley questioned the shutting down of a "critical piece of infrastructure" in Sydney.
Formerly a pro-Palestinian MP in parliament before shifting her position, Ms Ley took aim at the protest organisers and suggested the rally be moved to another location.
"I respect the right of free speech and protest, but this is taking it to another level ... the protest could happen elsewhere," Ms Ley told Sky News.
Labor backbencher Ed Husic, who has been more outspoken on ending the war on Gaza, emphasised unity.
"What we are seeing is that Australians are deeply affected by the images they are seeing out of Gaza," he told ABC TV.
"They want to send a strong message through peaceful protests to governments, both here and abroad, that the killing has got to stop, the starvation has got to end."
Several thousand protesters also marched through Melbourne to block a major CBD thoroughfare with many in the crowd banging pots and pans in a nod to mounting concerns about mass starvation in Gaza.
More than 60,000 Palestinians have been killed in the war in Gaza, according to local health authorities, while the United Nations says dozens of people have died in recent weeks due to starvation.
Israel's military campaign began after militant group Hamas attacked Israel on October 7, 2023, killing 1200 people and taking more than 251 hostages.

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Otago Daily Times
5 hours ago
- Otago Daily Times
New laws mulled in wake of Sydney Harbour Bridge protest
Protest laws could be repealed or expanded following a march across an iconic Australian landmark, as activists plan for more demonstrations. The pro-Palestine movement, boosted by a march across the Sydney Harbour Bridge which made news across the nation and around the world, hopes to build on its momentum. The march across the bridge and back in pouring rain on Sunday came after opposition from police, and a court's overruling approval that has politicians worrying about the rare occurrence becoming common. Further protests are planned on August 24 in Sydney, Melbourne, Canberra, Adelaide and Perth with hopes more can be organised in other cities. Ahead of the state's parliament resuming on Tuesday, New South Wales Premier Chris Minns says his government is examining whether a legal precedent has been set by the Supreme Court judgment that allowed the protest to proceed. "No one should believe it's open season on the bridge," he told reporters on Monday. But new laws might be needed to stop future bridge protests. Mr Minns was "not ruling anything out" but said any legislation could not be rushed. Federal Opposition Leader Sussan Ley encouraged the premier to look at "what might happen next". "Because we can't continue to have these protests that shut down such an important area of a major city," she told reporters. In her determination declining to prohibit the march, Justice Belinda Rigg said the bridge would have been closed to traffic regardless of whether the protest was authorised or not. Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said demonstrations were an important part of democracy and highlighted the peaceful nature of the Sydney march. "Australians want people to stop killing each other, they want peace and security ... they don't want conflict brought here," he said. Mr Minns has faced some internal dissent from other Labor MPs over protest legislation. NSW Greens MP Sue Higginson has also flagged plans to seek the repeal of laws limiting protest, first introduced by the previous coalition government but expanded under Labor. Palestine Action Group organiser Josh Lees, defendant of the court action NSW Police took in an unsuccessful attempt to have the demonstration ruled unlawful, says nationwide protests are being planned for August 24. "We want to build on this massive momentum we have now," he told reporters. Despite concerns of regular marches across the bridge, Mr Lees said the group had no plans for a repeat crossing any time soon and accused the premier of having an anti-protest agenda. "His stance is pretty clear and he's passed a raft of anti-protest legislation already," Mr Lees said. "We're going to have to keep fighting for our rights to demonstrate."


NZ Herald
7 hours ago
- NZ Herald
The 109-year-old pact that looms over European moves to recognise a Palestinian state
To many Arabs, who view it as a great betrayal, it seeded a legacy of strife and bloodshed in the Middle East. The real-time crisis unfolding in the Gaza Strip — the starving children, the Israeli restrictions on aid, the Palestinians killed as they try to collect food — undoubtedly had a greater impact on Prime Minister Keir Starmer of Britain and President Emmanuel Macron of France than the stains of the past. Yet their momentous decisions have cast a light on the shadowy roles of both countries in a region where they once vied for influence. 'The history is so relevant,' said Eugene L. Rogan, a professor of modern Middle Eastern history at the University of Oxford in England. 'It shows there's always a chance for historical actors who screwed up in the past to make up for their mistakes.' Rogan praised the moves towards recognition for reasons both past and present. On its current course, he said, Israel was opening the door to unthinkable treatment of the Palestinians: expulsion from Gaza or worse. Recognising a Palestinian state does Israel a favour by opening the way to 'a form of cohabitation that is sustainable', he said. Speaking at the United Nations, the British Foreign Secretary, David Lammy, cited another century-old document in arguing that recognition would redress a historical injustice: the Balfour Declaration, issued a year after the signing of Sykes-Picot, which endorsed 'the establishment in Palestine of a national home for the Jewish people'. It had a proviso that 'nothing shall be done which may prejudice the civil and religious rights of existing non-Jewish communities in Palestine'. After 21 months of relentless Israeli attacks in Gaza, with the spectre of famine across the enclave, Lammy said that Britain had a responsibility to act on behalf of the territory's long-oppressed Palestinian population. 'His argument is that it's time to make good on the second half of that promise,' said Rogan, whose books include The Arabs: A History. 'At the time of the Balfour had a worldwide empire, which in 1917, they could not imagine losing. David Lammy is operating in a postcolonial, post-EU Britain. But he's using history as a legitimating factor.' Lammy said that Britain could be proud that it 'helped lay the foundations for a homeland for the Jewish people'. Yet the country's motive in backing what later became Israel was less moral than strategic, Rogan said. It was seeking a client community in Palestine that would prevent the territory from falling into enemy hands. London feared the territory could be used as a launchpad for attacks on the Suez Canal, which was then controlled by Britain. Moreover, Britain backed away from its pro-Zionist stance as it found it hard to reconcile a Jewish state with preserving relations with the Arab world. In a later document, the White Paper of 1939, Britain proposed that the Jewish homeland would be created within a majority-Arab Palestinian state and that Jewish immigration to Palestine be limited to 75,000 for five years. 'Israel was not created because of the Balfour Declaration; it was created in spite of the Balfour Declaration,' said Michael B. Oren, an Israeli American historian who served as Israel's ambassador to Washington and later as a deputy minister in the government of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. Oren argued that the decisions of Britain and France to recognise a state would not hasten an end to the conflict in Gaza but prolong it. By offering this concession to the Palestinians now, he said, the West had given Hamas even less incentive to agree to a ceasefire. He chalked it up to a bid for relevance by two postcolonial powers. 'These are former Middle Eastern powers that want to feel like Middle Eastern powers,' said Oren, who wrote Six Days of War: June 1967 and the Making of the Modern Middle East. 'There's a pathetic quality to it.' Others argue that if these moves had no impact, they would not have drawn the furious reactions they did from Netanyahu and other Israeli officials. The addition of Britain and France — plus Canada and Malta, which said last week that they, too, would back recognition at the United Nations General Assembly in September — means that more than three-quarters of the UN's 193 member states will have recognised a Palestinian state. France had a less direct stake in Palestine than Britain did after ceding its claims in the Sykes-Picot treaty. But its move towards Palestinian recognition represents another fateful turn in its relationship with Israel. From 1945 to 1967, France was Israel's biggest backer in the West. Part of that was rooted in its wrenching experience with decolonisation. In 1954, France faced an anti-colonial uprising in Algeria, where the nationalists were backed by Egypt's nationalist president, Gamal Abdel Nasser. France, viewing Israel as a bulwark against Nasser, drew close, supplying the country with Mirage fighter planes and nuclear technology that became the foundation of its undeclared nuclear weapons programme. But in 1967, days before Israel launched a military strike against Egypt, de Gaulle, then France's president, imposed an arms embargo on Israel and shifted his gaze to the Arab states. Gérard Araud, who served as France's ambassador to Israel from 2003 to 2006, said that rupture cast a long shadow. 'I felt there was always a sense of 'Don't trust the French,'' he recalled. By supporting Israel in the Arab-Israeli war of 1967, the United States had in any case supplanted France as its No. 1 ally. France went on to become the first Western country to develop close ties to the Palestine Liberation Organisation, which represents Palestinians internationally and is led by the President of the Palestinian Authority, Mahmoud Abbas. The decision to recognise a Palestinian state nevertheless carries significant political risk for Macron, Araud said. France has both the largest Jewish and the largest Muslim communities in Western Europe. It has been scarred by a string of Islamist terrorist attacks. In recognising Palestinian statehood, historians said, France and Britain would do well to recognise their diminished sway over a region they once ruled. Such recognition was sorely lacking for decades after the authors of Sykes-Picot divvied up the Middle East, with lasting consequences. 'Neither country understood that the age of colonialism was over,' Araud said. 'They behaved as if they were still all powerful. It's not the most glorious page of history for either country.' This article originally appeared in The New York Times. Written by: Mark Landler Photographs by: Saher Alghorra ©2025 THE NEW YORK TIMES


National Business Review
9 hours ago
- National Business Review
US-EU strike 15% trade tariff deal; aid airdrops reach Gaza
Kia ora and welcome to your Monday summary of global business and political news. First to developing news, and the United States and European Union have reached a trade deal in the past several hours ahead of the August 1 deadline, the BBC reported. US President Donald Trump and European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen held talks in Scotland that involved "tough negotiations". The European Union faced a 30% tariff from August, but von der Leyen confirmed that had dropped to 15% across the board. "We have reached a deal. It's a good deal for everybody," Trump said overnight. "It's going to bring us closer together ... it's a partnership in a sense." Von der Leyen said it was a "huge deal" following careful and tough negotiations. Meanwhile, Trump does not expect to reach a deal with Canada, after hard balling on both sides to carve out an agreement, the BBC said. Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney said his country would not accept a 'bad deal' or rush into an agreement. Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney. In China, industrial profits fell for a second consecutive month, amid competition and US tariffs, Bloomberg reported. Profits fell 4.3% last month, compared with a year earlier, after a 9.1% fall in May. Exports to the US fell, which squeezed profit margins for Chinese manufacturers. That also risked a decline in business confidence and flow through to lower investment and jobs. In the Middle East, Israel started a 'tactical pause' in fighting in three areas of Gaza to address the declining humanitarian situation, Al Jazeera reported. The suspension of military operations from 10am to 8pm local time every day was until further notice. The military also said it would designate secure routes to help aid agencies deliver food and other supplies. Aid airdrops into Gaza, including packages of flour, sugar, and canned food, were delivered over the weekend. French President Emmanual Macron said his country would formally recognise a Palestinian state in September, at the annual UN General Assembly. BBC correspondent Lyse Doucet said that recognition was largely symbolic and profoundly political. The US and Israel condemned the move. Palestinians welcomed the pledge by France and urged other countries to do the same, Al Jazeera reported. 'We hope it will be implemented, and we hope that most or all countries around the world will follow France's lead in recognising the Palestinian people's right to an independent state,' Nabil Abdel Razek, a resident of Ramallah in the occupied West Bank, told AFP. Gaza kids charity organisation distributes food. In other news, Intel planned to proceed with plans to cut 15% of its global workforce, as the chipmaker attempts a turnaround, CNN reported. CEO Lip-Bu Tan said that turnaround would take time, but there were 'clear opportunities' to improve its performance. Intel said the staff cuts were 'designed to create a faster-moving, flatter and more agile organisation'. The company also said it's scrapping projects in Germany and Poland as part of its cost cutting measures. Airline manufacturer Boeing faced the risk of strike action after union workers rejected an offer that would boost their salaries by 20% over four years, Bloomberg reported. The International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers voted overwhelmingly against the new terms. The proposal 'fell short of addressing the priorities and sacrifices' of the company's skilled workforce, the union said. 'Our members are standing together to demand a contract that respects their work and ensures a secure future.' Finally, Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg announced Shengjia Zhao, the co-creator of OpenAI's ChatGPT, was appointed as chief scientist of Meta Superintelligence Labs, CNBC reported. Zuckerberg announced the Meta Superintelligence Labs initiative in June. Zhao will work directly with Zuckerberg. 'Shengjia has already pioneered several breakthroughs including a new scaling paradigm and distinguished himself as a leader in the field,' Zuckerberg said. 'I'm looking forward to working closely with him to advance his scientific vision.'