
Responding to theĀ genocidal starvation of Palestinians in Gaza, Merri-bek Council passed another motion on September 10 calling for sanctions on Israel.
Socialist Alliance Merri-bek councillor Sue Bolton (Bababi Djinanang Ward) put forward the motion, which includes re-raising the Palestinian flag at Coburg Town Hall and council organising an event to mark the international day of solidarity with Palestine on November 29. It was seconded by Greens councillor Ella Svensson (Brunswick West Ward).Ā
Merri-bek CouncilĀ flew the Palestinian flag in 2023,Ā at Boltonās instigation. The motion called for it stay flying until there was a permanent ceasefire in Gaza. It was the first Victorian council to take such action, setting a precedent for others to follow suit. However, controversially, council officers removed the flag during last yearās temporary ceasefire.
Merri-bek for Palestine and Northern Suburbs for Palestine (M4P)Ā organised aĀ spirited rally outside Coburg Town Hall before councillors, rally-goers and locals joined the meeting.Ā
M4PĀ said the motionās success this time could be attributed to the global movement for Palestine, which has continued to draw attention to the aggressor. A similar motion to reinstate the Palestinian flag was voted down earlier this year andĀ Bolton told the meeting council had not allowed her to move a similar motion in August.
Palestinian Australian Sara Alasad and anti-Zionist Jew Veronica Sherman, both of whom spoke at the rally, spoke in favour of Boltonās motion at the meeting.
āI have seen Merri-bek proudly supporting First Nations struggles and refugees and human-rights causes. Let us continue that legacy now by raising the Palestinian flag,ā Alasad said.
Sherman said ācollective solidarity is powerful ... [and] we have a moral obligation not to be silent. Raising the flag is raising our collective voice.ā
āThere is a need for Merri-bek to raise its voice again, to indicate its solidarity for the people in Gaza, who are experiencing the most horrendous genocide,ā Bolton told the meeting. She also said council must ārenew its calls for Australia to impose new ā full ā sanctions on Israel, including an end to the two-way arms trade, a permanent ceasefire and an end to the siegeā.
Boltonās motion, containing four points, was carried. There was unanimous support for point one that council ānotes the distressā within large Āé¶¹“«Ć½ of the Merri-bek community from āwitnessing the human-made famine in Gaza as a result of the denial of food, and the destruction of Gaza as a result of relentless bombingā.
Bolton told the meeting that adopting point one is āmeaninglessā without adopting the subsequent action points.
However, Labor councillor Helen Politis (Harmony Park), who mostly voted against or abstained, spoke against the motion as a whole. She said thatĀ asking council to take a position on the Gaza genocide is what causes ādivisionā and that council should focus on āsocial cohesionā.
Bolton replied that the division is caused by the ārich and powerfulā, which have an interest in keeping the war going and āmaintaining the Middle East for economic exploitationā. āThere is a precedent for councils taking positions [on international issues],ā Bolton said, citing
Eight councillors, including Bolton, four Greens, one right-wing independent, and two Labor councillors, voted for the second point that council: āadd its voice to renewed calls for Australia to impose sanctions on Israel, until a permanent ceasefire is enacted and the siege of Gaza is fully lived to allow Palestinians in Gaza to have unlimited access to food, water, fuel, electricity, medical supplies and construction materials to repair damaged homes and civilian infrastructureā.
Three councillors voted against, including two independents and one Labor.
Seven councillors voted in favour of raising the Palestinian flag (point three), including Bolton, four Greens, one Labor and one independent. Two Labor councillors abstained.
The fourth point asked council to organise an event to mark November 29,Ā . Eight councillors voted in favour, including some who had voted against other points.