Protesters have punched horses and pelted officers with rocks, cans of baked beans, horse manure and acid, says the chief commissioner. Meanwhile, police have been accused of using excessive force.
In short:
There have been clashes between police and a large group of protesters outside the Melbourne Convention and Exhibition Centre where a major defence and weapons expo is being held.
Hundreds of officers have been called in for what Victoria Police say is their biggest operation since the S11 protests outside the World Economic Forum in Melbourne 24 years ago.
What's next?
Police and protesters are expected to remain on scene in large numbers throughout the conference.
Emphasis on some protestors. Idiot protestors, of which there were clearly some (I've seen footage of a man attempting to hit a horse in the head, people throwing objects at officers and charging at them), should always be dealt with by police. There is a give and take to this stuff. Yes, we have a right to protest but it does not happen in a vacuum and our behaviour as protestors can and does influence future police behaviour and government legislation. If you give them a reason to crackdown on you, they will. Unfortunately what we have seen in the algorithmic social media age, and particularly since COVID, is a rise in a completely unhinged and deranged individuals who live in some fictional reality attending these events and negatively impacting public protest for everyone else. That's when you start getting over-policing of events that would otherwise be genuinely safe and peaceful.
It's really not appropriate for a politician, the police minister to boot, to be calling anyone an 'idiot' in the same breath as demanding respect for the police. It's the sort of language I'd accept from a truck driver, not from a top politician.
He is setting the tone of the discussion in an extremely problematic way by dehumanising/othering those desparately trying to stop lethal weapons sales used in crimes against humanity, while he normalises the gathering of war profiteers.
I'm extremely disappainted by this government's policing policy.
[Premier Jacinta Allan] also defended the state government's sponsorship of the Land Forces conference, and said delegates attending the event had the right to gather.
"Any industry deserves the right to have these sort of events in a peaceful and respectful way."
When your industry is undeniably dedicated to murder and maim, you don't deserve peace (or, for that matter, respect).
Rubber bullets are especially concerning. Many of us saw the damage they did to journalists and protestors who were shot with them in the US protests by police a few years ago.
Was in a cab after getting car in for service. Old mate was listening to 2gb and holy fucking shit were they beating up on the protests and saying vile racist shit.