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Pro-Palestine protest could be tested in the supreme court

Jordyn Beazley

The Palestine Action Group is deciding whether to go before the supreme court once again about a planned protest after the police opposed a march to the Sydney Opera House.

Assistant commissioner Peter McKenna addressed reporters a short time ago to say police had decided to oppose the planned route outlined in the group’s ‘Form 1’ protest permit because of safety concerns linked to limited exit points from the Opera House forecourt.

People marching across the Sydney Harbour Bridge on behalf of people living in Gaza
As was the case for the march across the Sydney Harbour Bridge in August on behalf of people living in Gaza, Police are worried about how many people will join the protest proposed for the Opera House forecourt. Photograph: Flavio Brancaleone/AAP

He said police would lodge an objection to the protest in the NSW supreme court, but were still discussing altenative routes with the action group.

Mckenna said:

They have indicated to us that they will give us a response later about whether they themselves will test this matter in the supreme court, or whether they will consider the alternative routes that we may be able to negotiate.

We understand that this is a significant anniversary

We’re not anti-protest. We facilitate thousands of protests, and in fact, in this particular group, we’ve been facilitating protests and public assemblies for the last two years. So it’s not a matter of us not wanting them to have a public assembly.

It’s not even a matter about it being at the Opera House itself. It’s about public safety.

Mckenna said organisers had estimated in their Form 1 that 10,000 people would attend. However, he said he was skeptical of the estimate, given how the number of people that marched across the Sydney Harbour Bridge in August vastly exceeded what organisers expected.

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War crimes trial for former SAS soldier could take years to go to court

The nation’s first war crime murder trial involving an Australian defence force soldier won’t happen until at least 2027, giving defence minister Richard Marles time to suppress certain matters, AAP reports.

Oliver Jordan Schulz. Photograph: Dean Lewins/AAP

Both the prosecution and defence in the case of former SAS soldier Oliver Jordan Schulz say they are yet to see all the evidence because a decision about what can be released hasn’t yet been made.

Schulz pleaded not guilty in the NSW supreme court on Friday to allegations he committed a war crime in the murder of a young man in Afghanistan. He is accused of killing Afghan man Dad Mohammad during a mission in May 2012.

A trial date was not set because national security concerns had delayed both sides from seeing much of the evidence against Schulz.

Schulz is the first serving or former ADF member to face a war crime charge of murder under domestic law.

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