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Backpackers flock to Coogee after Bronte crackdown

A Randwick City Council spokesman said the council was working closely with police to prepare for a possible influx of people on Christmas Day.

The crowd was large but mostly good-natured, according to Randwick Council.Credit: Janie Barrett

More bins have been provided and additional cleaning and waste staff have been deployed to assist with any subsequent issues.

The council said it was also trying to remind potential participants that Randwick’s beaches and parks were alcohol-free zones, putting up posters and distributing information to nearby backpacker hostels.

“The no-alcohol rule allows police to impose sanctions when necessary,” the spokesman said.

“Whilst crowd numbers are large, feedback so far suggests most people are well-behaved and celebrating an Australian Christmas on the beach.”

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Signs informed attendees that alcohol was prohibited and glass glasses were not allowed, while council guards with high visors wandered through the crowd.

The Coogee Beach festivities come after Randwick’s northern neighbor Waverley Council cracked down on celebrations at Bronte Beach following an “unacceptable” mess left behind last year.

Waverley this year spent more than $250,000 Increased policing and security, including checkpoints to confiscate alcohol, additional cleaning, buses and toilets, and crowd management.

“This is not an approved or managed council event and although we strongly discourage crowds from attending, we cannot ban people from the beach,” Waverley Mayor Will Nemesh said in a statement in early December.

“However, we are committed to mitigating impacts on the community as much as possible.”

A Randwick Council spokesman said some extra resources and clean-up crews were also sent from Bronte to Coogee.

Visitors left the park at Bronte Beach littered with trash in 2022.

Visitors left the park at Bronte Beach littered with trash in 2022.Credit: Facebook

Residents near Bronte have been criticizing the Christmas Day party for years; He complains about noise, litter, antisocial behavior and the park being used as a “public urinal”.

As long queues formed for the toilets at Coogee Beach on Thursday, some attendees were urinating in bottles or showers instead.

Jul Krasousky, a French national, said that he wanted to go to Bronte on Thursday, but “it was closed, there were too many police and they checked whether there was alcohol.”

“Summer is here, Christmas is here, we are on holiday,” he said.

“If we were in France we wouldn’t do this. But we don’t have family, we want to be with our friends and everyone is here.”

Police were also seen patrolling Coogee, with more officers arriving as the afternoon progressed.

A spokesman said NSW Police were aware of the incident and were at the scene but had not yet been called to respond to any specific incidents as of Thursday afternoon.

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