A police officer will face court after being accused of punching former federal Greens candidate Hannah Thomas in the face at a protest in Sydney earlier this year.
Thomas suffered a serious eye injury that required surgery when she was arrested during a protest on 27 June outside a Sydney firm reportedly linked to the manufacture of components for United States fighter jets used by the Israel Defense Forces (IDF).
Thomas was initially charged with resisting police — a case since dropped by prosecutors — and her lawyers have flagged civil proceedings in the Supreme Court for "malicious prosecution" and assault and battery by police.
Police charged the arresting officer on Tuesday with assault occasioning actual bodily harm.
The 33-year-old senior constable is scheduled to front the Bankstown Local Court on 18 November.

Hannah Thomas' lawyers have flagged they will pursue proceedings in the Supreme Court for "malicious prosecution" after the 35-year-old was initially charged with resisting police. Source: AAP / Dan Himbrechts
"The officer is being managed in the workplace and his employment status is under review."
Senior police initially defended the officer's actions and resisted calls to launch a critical incident investigation, which triggers oversight measures, including detectives from a different police command.
"I am comfortable based on the information provided to me that I did not declare the matter a critical incident," assistant commissioner Brett McFadden said three days after Thomas' arrest on 30 June.
McFadden made those comments shortly before an internal investigation into the alleged assault of Thomas was placed under the police's professional standards command.
Police ordered to pay protesters' costs after dropped cases
Five people were arrested outside SEC Plating in Belmore, which has denied alleged links to the IDF.
Criminal cases against four protesters — including an offensive language charge against a 41-year-old — have now been dropped.
On Friday, a magistrate ordered police to pay costs amounting to $39,435 to the four, including $21,000 to Thomas. The arrests are subject to an internal NSW Police review, with external oversight by the police watchdog.
Thomas was charged with hindering or resisting police and two counts of refusing to comply with a move-on direction before the allegations were formally withdrawn earlier in September.
After the charges were dropped, her lawyer, Peter O'Brien, said the arresting officer in question would be charged, and others involved should "certainly be disciplined".
He confirmed legal representatives would seek costs for the prosecution and compensation for Thomas.
She came second to Prime Minister Anthony Albanese in his inner western Sydney seat of Grayndler at the federal election in May.