
New South Wales Police brutalised pro-Palestine protesters picketing SEC Plating in Belmore on June 27, arresting five people and hospitalising one.
It was the fourth picket of the facility, organised by the Weapons Out of the West (WoW) group, which campaigns against weapons' production in Western Sydney.聽
SEC Plating manufactures plating, engineering coatings and finishes for F-35 fighter jets used by Israel to conduct its genocide in Gaza. It has contracts with a number of weapons' manufacturers.
At the previous picket, protesters managed to delay workers from entering the site for two hours, before police arrived and moved them on. This time, a WoW spokesperson told 麻豆传媒 that聽when the group of 50 pro-Palestine protesters approached the site, police were waiting for them.
Police had already arrested one legal observer before the picket started. The WoW spokesperson said on June 27 they were attempting to negotiate with police when one officer became 鈥渁gitated鈥 and the violence started.聽
Videos posted on social media show police dragging protesters across the ground, holding people by the neck and slamming them into fences.
A young woman was hospitalised with injuries to her eye and face 鈥渁fter being battered by two officers with no apparent cause鈥. She now needs surgery.聽One officer reportedly said as she protested the violence: 鈥淭hat鈥檚 on you鈥.聽WoW said that medics were 鈥渂arred by police from providing first aid鈥.
Another protester was 鈥渋llegally strip-searched in front of the crowd in the cold with no privacy鈥, the spokesperson said. They were subsequently arrested, despite nothing incriminating being found.聽
Rising Tide activist Zack Schofield, who was arrested, said NSW Premier Chris Minns 鈥渃an鈥檛 arrest his way out of the people objecting to genocide and the complicity of Australia in this鈥. He added: 鈥淭he excessive force used by police was brutal and will be put into question.鈥澛
Martime Union of Australia Sydney branch organiser Shane Reside, who was also arrested, said: 鈥淎fter witnessing the brutal assault committed against another member of the community, I called out the police for their actions and on that basis they then targeted me and I was arrested.鈥
Another protester said: 鈥淲e refuse the funding, arming and support of the Zionist entities in our communities 鈥 A company heading towards insolvency and cowering from an angry community calls on the violence of the state to protect itself鈥︹澛
said police were seen 鈥渢ackling individuals walking along the footpath to the ground and dragging one person on the concrete鈥.
鈥淎 police officer placed their hands around the neck of one person to drag them backwards, causing them to be unable to breathe for about a minute, with serious bruising developing鈥.
They said police had issued move-on orders on the basis that individuals being near the location would cause 鈥渇ear and alarm鈥 and that the protests were 鈥渦nauthorised鈥 because they hadn鈥檛 filled out a Notice of Intention to hold a public assembly.
Legal Observers NSW said these are 鈥渘ot valid reasons for issuing a move-on order under the Law Enforcement (Powers and Responsibilities) Act 2002鈥.
Families for Palestine said Minns and Police Minister Yasmin Catley should 鈥渢ake accountability鈥 for the actions of police. 鈥淭his violence happened under your watch.鈥
Palestine Action Group Sydney, which last week took NSW Labor to the Supreme Court over its draconian anti-protest laws, said: 鈥淥nce again, the authorities who should be arresting those complicit in genocide, are instead those trying to stop it.鈥
NSW Greens Senator Mehreen Faruqi聽said the Minns government has 鈥渞epeatedly undermined our civil liberties and vilified pro-Palestine, anti-genocide protesters ...聽Today鈥檚 events are a direct result of that dangerous political approach and this Labor government must be held accountable.鈥澛
The WoW spokesperson said there was a lot of community support for the pickets, and that protesters would not be deterred by police violence and intimidation.
[Legal Observers NSW are asking for any footage of the incident to be emailed to them at legalobserversnsw@protonmail.com]