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Saturday, 4 February 2017
Melbourne anti-Trump rally: hundreds attend to voice 'unprecedented' anger
Greens leader Richard Di Natale tells crowd people feel shocked and let down by the political establishment
(L-R) Headvig Söderhielm, Jess Gordon and Ally Sheehan attend the anti-Trump rally at the State Library in Melbourne on Friday.
Photograph: Melissa Davey for the Guardian
The groundswell of anger created around the world by the actions of
the US president is “unprecedented”, Greens leader Richard Di Natale
told a few hundred protesters at an anti-Trump rally in Melbourne on
Friday evening.
Many gathered outside the State Library in the city as a range of
speakers including Di Natale addressed the crowd. They chanted “Down
Trump down!” and “No hate, no fear, Muslims are welcome here”. Similar
protests will follow in Canberra, Sydney, Newcastle and Hobart on
Saturday.
The Melbourne protesters condemned both Donald Trump
and the Australian prime minister, Malcolm Turnbull, for their
respective countries’ treatment of asylum seekers and refugees. They
called on Turnbull to “Bring them here” before commencing a march
through the city.
The protest was sparked by indications this week that Trump might not honour an agreement
with the Obama administration to send 1,250 refugees from
Australian-run detention centres on Manus Island and Nauru to the US for
resettlement.
The White House gave reassurances earlier in the week that the deal
would go ahead. However – after the Washington Post revealed a
transcript of an explosive conversation between the US president and Malcolm Turnbull regarding the deal – Trump tweeted on Thursday that it was a “dumb deal” and labelled those affected as “illegal immigrants”.
Continuing uncertainty brought calls for the federal government to
let them resettle in Australia to end the political back-and-forth.
Green leader Richard Di Natale attends anti-Trump protests in Melbourne on Friday. Photograph: Melissa Davey for the Guardian
Speaking to Guardian Australia after addressing the crowd, Di Natale
said: “I think, like many Australians right now, people are feeling
shocked and angry and they are realising the political establishment has
let them down.”
“Now’s the time to make it very clear to all those people who
are the target of Donald Trump’s vile attack that we stand with them,
because I think many of those people feel abandoned right now. They feel
ignored.”
Melbourne
city was brought to a standstill at peak hour as people walked over
tram lines and down main roads towards Flinders Street station. People
finishing work in the city joined the crowd, which swelled as it passed
through the city.
Tiffany Harkins, who moved to Melbourne a few months ago from New
York, said she had come to the protest in a show of solidarity with
refugees and asylum seekers, and also with her friends and family at
home. “With everything that’s going on in the states we need to stand up
and to show we love everyone and that you shouldn’t promote
fear-mongering or hatred to people of a certain religion, colour or
class, just because certain things happened,” she said. “I don’t
normally protest, but I felt compelled.”
Another protester, Headvig Söderhielm, attended with friends holding
placards, one of which read: “For those who’ve come across the seas
we’ve boundless plains to share”.
She said: “When we are old, we don’t want to say to ourselves that
when all of this was going on, we stayed at home and did nothing.”
Police watch on as a couple of hundred people rally
against Trump at the State Library in Melbourne. Photograph: Melissa
Davey for the Guardian
On Friday, despite US press secretary Sean Spicer’s latest reassurances, more than 70 organisations called for the camps on Nauru and Manus Island to immediately close, with all refugees and asylum seekers brought to Australia.
Charities, aid groups, unions and thinktanks urged immediate action
to address what they called a “humanitarian crisis” as refugees spoke of
the torment created by the uncertainty.
A joint letter from the 70 organisations said: “Beyond the reports of
physical and sexual abuse, including of children; inadequate medical
attention; suicides and attempted suicides; even a murder; the
extinguishment of hope has pushed people to the edge.
“Many of these people have been recognised as refugees. We owe them protection and safety now.
“With the US resettlement deal in serious doubt, the most obvious and
humane solution is to clear the camps and bring these people to
Australia until a safe long-term, appropriate outcome for them can be
guaranteed.
Phil Glendenning, the president of the Refugee Council of Australia,
used a Sydney media conference to note the country’s history of
leadership in accepting refugees. “Forty years ago when Australia faced a
serious crisis with regards to refugees, we had a prime minister named
Malcolm – Malcolm Fraser – and a leader of the opposition named Bill –
Bill Hayden. Together they formed a bipartisan partnership to bring
refugees to this country,” he said.
Glendenning told Guardian Australia he worried that even if the US
agreed to honour the deal, the policy of extreme vetting might mean it
was worthless anyway. “If extreme vetting means more cruelty, more
waiting , more limbo, more uncertainty, then that’s not tolerable,”
Glendenning said.
“The thing that worries me about President Trump is he’s using
extreme vetting as a way of doing what he really wants to do, and that’s
scupper the deal.”
Many joined the rally after leaving work in Melbourne. Photograph: Melissa Davey for the Guardian
Paul Ronalds,
CEO of Save the Children, said in a statement: “We know from our time providing services on Nauru that uncertainty and a lack of hope has a devastating impact on the health and wellbeing of refugees and asylum seekers.
“The
Australian government’s focus on finding viable third-country options
for resettlement have been welcome, but those attempts have not resulted
in an outcome that ends the uncertainty and provides a safe and secure
home.
Turnbull maintained his composure on Friday as the fallout from his
phone call with the president continued. Asked on 2SM Radio in Sydney if
Trump was a brash character, Turnbull replied: “I’ll leave others to
comment on him but he’s clearly a very big personality.”
Turnbull again denied that Trump had hung up on him during the pair’s
25-minute weekend phone call, saying it was a “frank discussion” that
had ended “courteously”.
Efforts to smooth tensions are underway, with Joe Hockey, the
Australian ambassador in Washington, called to the White House to meet
Trump’s chief strategist, Steve Bannon, and chief of staff, Reince
Preibus, for what was described as a “productive meeting”. A White House
spokesman said: “They conveyed the president’s deep admiration for the
Australian people.” Refugees on Nauru and Manus Island spoke of the torture of the ongoing uncertainty.
One man, who is on Nauru with his wife and young daughter, told
Guardian Australia at the time the US refugee deal was revealed in
November that it was the “best news” they had received after four years
in detention.
Their time in Nauru included alleged assaults and an incident of alleged sexual assault against their daughter.
The family has already met US officials and were scheduled for a
second meeting this month. That meeting has now been downgraded to a
standing unscheduled request.
Now, he told Guardian Australia, “when they don’t like us we don’t like to go”.
“We were happy – but not now,” he said. “Nobody knows what is
[Trump’s] plan. We just want freedom from here and Trump has a plan
after four months. Maybe after one or two years he’ll tell us if he
wants us or no. We all have stress about this and we are tired and sad.” Behrouz Boochani,
an Iranian journalist detained on Manus Island, said the ongoing
questions around the deal had been “torturing people”, and Trump’s tweet
left them sure that “nothing will happen”.
“This policy has been defeated and it’s time to solve the problem by
taking people to Australia or to accept New Zealand’s offer,” he said.
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