Pro-Palestine activists ask court to make genocide ruling during battle over Sydney Opera House protest | Gaza

The Palestinian Action group asked a Sydney Court to find that Israel had been doing a genocide in Gaza while activists were trying to organize a protest in the city’s opera house.
After opposing a march proposed to the Sydney Opera House from Hyde Park on 12 October, another Jews against the occupation was discussed in the Supreme Court of the state and the new South Wales Police.
Police, protest organizers called the “End of the Genocide in Gaza”, said security concerns.
On Tuesday, Justice Ian Harrison briefly heard about the issue before moving to the appeal court after an application made by police lawyers due to protest days and other legal complexities.
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A lawyer Nicholas Hanna, who is moving for groups against the NSW police, said the court would ask the court to ask the court to make a positive finding about the genocide on Wednesday, given the Court of Appeal on Wednesday.
Hanna said that a declaration from Chris Sidoti was presented as a part of the group’s evidence that Israel’s behavior is genocide. Sidoti is the most experienced in Australia International Law Experts and a member of the UN Independent International investigation commissionWhich published a report Last month, the Israeli government and the army in Gaza said that genocide. Israel rejected the findings of the report.
Hanna was asked whether the appeal court was beyond the authority to make such a finding, except for the Supreme Court. Considering that the NSW police should weigh the “seriousness and urgency of the case”, the court said that the court should weigh the “seriousness and urgency of the case”.
“The genocide is a crime crime and that is the commitment of Israel, and that’s why we say it is relevant,” he said.
Justice Desmond Fagan referred to Israel’s behavior as a genocide during a guidance on Friday.
At one point, he said that the crowd said that “because of what seems to be like a feeling in the community, and that for two years, too many people developed real -time publication of genocide”.
Fagan called on the police to think about the “power of emotions üzerinden on the issue within the community.
Deputy Commissioner Peter McKenna said on Friday, NSW police, including the crowded crushing potential to organize an authorized protest due to security concerns of the Palestinian Action Group’s “Form One” application announced.
The police said that they were open to negotiating an alternative route and two years after October 7, they understood that it was an important anniversary ”.
If a form is accepted by the police, it protects the participants of a protest from the collection of certain actions – such as blocking traffic – in accordance with the ABSTRACT CRIME law.
When the police rejected an application, the court promised the “authorization” of a protest and whether the participants provided legal protection.
The court heard on Tuesday, one of the legal complexities to be discussed by the Court of Appeal, whether the protest will be conflicted with the legislation regulating the use of the Opera Assembly, which restricted protests.
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The Executive Council of the Australian Jews (ECAJ) and the Jewish MPs were planning to challenge the protest and position of Sunday.
A lawyer who appeared in front of the court on behalf of the groups on Tuesday, said that some members of the Jewish community were afraid of what emerged in the Opera House on 9 October 2023.
The protesters marched from Sydney’s Town Hall two years ago to the opera house, to commemorate the attacks of Hamas, where the sails were illuminated with blue and white, that killed about 1,200 people on Israel.
Later, a group of people who confirmed that the police are not part of the Palestinian action group and that they were not at the rally of the first town hall – burning cartridges and anti -Semitic cheers, including the Jews Fuck ”.
The court has not yet decided whether the application of Jewish groups would be heard.
Alex Ryvchin, a joint manager of ECAJ, said on Tuesday that the planned rally on Sunday would provoke more hatred against our community ”.
“They will once again do this at a national turning point, with a great public expense, and how little adaptation will remain in this society,” he said.
“And the cost of all of this will meet by all of us in the form of higher security and social adaptation programs, to get some of the damages we allow them to give them back. This madness should stop.”
Two months ago, the Palestinian Action Group went to the Supreme Court in a walking proposal through the Sydney Harbor Bridge. Protesters won the estimated with 225,000 to 300,000 people who participated in the rally.




