Protesters banned from Sydney streets for another two weeks under controversial restrictions

The controversial protest ban can be extended every fortnight for up to three months.

A group of police officers standing facing a group of protesters

Some rallies — including a march condemning US strikes on Venezuela — have taken place despite the ban. Source: AAP / Flavio Brancaleone

Protesters will be banned from demonstrating on Sydney's streets for another two weeks after police extended the controversial restrictions.

NSW Police commissioner Mal Lanyon announced his decision on Tuesday evening, claiming public assemblies at this time had the potential to "cause fear and public safety issues".

"This is not about stopping free speech, it's about making sure that the community has the time to feel safe," he told reporters in Sydney.

"I ask for people to show respect, I ask for people to show courtesy, but most of all, I ask that people remain peaceful."
Laws rushed through NSW Parliament in the aftermath of a deadly mass shooting at Bondi Beach gave the commissioner the ability to ban protests in key metropolitan areas following a declared terrorist incident.

Lanyon deployed his powers almost immediately after they were granted, restricting protests for two weeks from Christmas Eve.

The declaration restricts public assemblies in Sydney's southwest, northwest and central metropolitan areas and can be extended fortnightly for up to three months.

All public assemblies since the declaration was imposed have been unauthorised, leaving participants vulnerable to arrest for obstructing traffic or pedestrians.

While some rallies — including a march condemning US strikes on Venezuela — have taken place despite the ban, civil liberties groups and activists warn extending it will prevent people from seeking official authorisation to protest.
"For all its faults, the [authorisation] process allows the community to have reassurance that they will be treated fairly by police," NSW Council for Civil Liberties president Timothy Roberts told the Australian Associated Press.

"By not being able to do that, there's an immediate anxiety about how the police will respond.

"That is a suppression of our rights when the community should be able to freely do that."

The powers are expected to be challenged in the High Court.


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Source: AAP




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