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#1 Australian Riots

Posted: Fri Dec 16, 2005 7:51 pm
by frigidmagi
BBC
Australians have been warned to stay away from beaches in Sydney and neighbouring cities this weekend due to the threat of more racial violence.

Sydney's Cronulla, Maroubra and Bondi beaches, and those in Wollongong and Newcastle, have been named as potential targets, police said.

At least 1,500 police will be on duty, after text messages circulated telling people to gather at certain locations.

Clashes first broke out last Sunday, in the area of Cronulla, south Sydney.

"Our latest intelligence tells us that large numbers of people are planning to go to [the areas named] on Sunday to cause riotous behaviour," New South Wales police commissioner Ken Moroney said.

"I would urge people who do not live in these areas to stay away unless they have a good reason to be there," he added.

The large-scale violence in Sydney started on Sunday, when thousands of young white men attacked people of Arabic and Mediterranean background on Cronulla Beach - apparently in revenge for a recent attack on two lifeguards.

Many of the rioters had been alerted to congregate in the area by receiving text messages.

Apparently in retaliation for the violence, groups described by police as having "Middle Eastern or Mediterranean" appearance were involved in two nights of violence and vandalism.

Calm has now been restored, although isolated incidents - such as the throwing of a Molotov cocktail at police - have continued, and police arrested 19 people on Thursday night.

They were wielding new powers to prevent civil unrest which were passed in the Australian state of New South Wales on Thursday.

They can enforce strict curfews, confiscate cars and ban alcohol sales.
BBC
Was it racism, revenge or simply alcohol-induced aggression?

The first large-scale outbreak of violence, on Sunday in Cronulla, had been a widely publicised event.


Everyone was drunk and anyone of Middle Eastern appearance got bashed. It went on all day into the night
Wade Kereopa

It came a week to the day after two surf life savers had been assaulted in what was believed to be an unprovoked attack by a large group of men of Middle Eastern appearance.

The following week, texts started circulating around Sydney calling for a revenge fight.

By Sunday, the media and a crowd of about 5,000 had gathered in anticipation in Cronulla. Right wing pamphlets were seen circulating in the crowd.

Seventeen-year-old Wade Kereopa and his friend Kurt Sholes were at the beach.

"At about 12 o'clock everyone started gathering at Cronulla and then some guy yelled out 'There's Lebs on the next train!" so thousands of people went up to the station, but there was only about two on the train and about 50 people ran on and bashed them," said Kurt.

His friend Wade, who admits to have been drinking all afternoon, found himself on the train as well.

"I saw a crowd of people running to the train station. I went to have a look and ended up getting pushed onto the train by all the Aussies behind me. All these Aussies were smashing these Middle Eastern people. Then another guy of Middle Eastern origin got chased and beaten by the crowd. Everyone was drunk and anyone of Middle Eastern appearance got bashed. It went on all day into the night," he said.

Apparently in retaliation, a Caucasian man was stabbed after an altercation outside a golf club with "a group of males of Middle Eastern or Mediterranean appearance", according to police reports. Fifty car-loads of youths - again of Middle Eastern or Mediterranean appearance - later smashed 100 vehicles with baseball bats and other weapons. Police received reports of firearms being "flashed" but not discharged.

The hostility escalated and spread across eight suburbs in Sydney's south and west. Sixteen people were arrested and charged with 41 offences.

On Monday, tensions remained high. More retaliatory attacks were carried out and police later made 11 more arrests during a second night of violence.

Car-loads of people were stopped and searched, there was violence at a mosque in the western suburb of Lakemba, assaults were carried out and a group of men armed with iron bars and guns were dispersed by police outside a convenience store in Cronulla.

'Attritional'

Despite the fact that right-wing pamphlets have been circulated, the violence does not appear to have been co-ordinated from the wings by extremist groups, but to be the result of large groups of youths fuelled by mass hysteria.

It does, however, come against the backdrop of long-term racial tensions in Cronulla - a predominantly white community with a beach easily accessible on the train from Sydney's western suburbs, which are home to a large Muslim population.


[The violence is] not going to stop one day. It's going to keep going, which is what it's been doing since my father's time
Jason Lalor, Cronulla

Jason Lalor lives minutes from the beach and is pessimistic that there is a quick fix to the deeply rooted antagonism on both sides.

He says he has been harassed by groups of Lebanese youths on more than one occasion and says he is tired of being hassled in his own neighbourhood.

"It's not going to stop one day. It's going to keep going, which is what it's been doing since my father's time."

The Australian Arabic Council (AAC) agrees that tensions have been building.

"These events typify an ugly and fringe element of Australian society," said AAC chairman Roland Jabbour.

"Arab Australians have had to cope with vilification, racism, abuse and fear of a racial backlash for a number of years, but these riots will take that fear to a new level," he said.


AUSTRALIANS BY ANCESTRY
Total population: 21 million
Australian: 6.7m (38.7%)
English: 6.4m (36.5%)
Irish: 1.9m (11%)
Italian: 800,000 (4.6%)
German: 742,000 (4.3%)
Chinese: 557,000 (3.2%)
Scottish: 540,000 (3.1%)
Greek: 376,000 (2.2%)
Dutch: 269,000 (1.5%)
Lebanese: 162,000 (0.9%)
Indian: 157,000 (0.9%)
Vietnamese: 157,000 (0.9%)
Polish: 151,000 (0.9%)
Source: Australian 2001 Census. Respondents may choose dual ancestry.

On Tuesday morning the New South Wales premier announced he was recalling parliament to push through tough new police powers to allow them to tackle the unrest.

In addition to having new powers of arrest, police will also be allowed to close down pubs and off licenses to prevent inebriated crowds accessing more alcohol.

There are new fears that the violence could spread nationally, with a high volume of mobile phone text messages inciting racial hatred.

One reads: " We'll show them! It's on again sunday... send this to everyone in your phone book... this is a straight up WAR! We must continue to come together to help the innocet an family's so every one can enjoy our beach's!"

The country is watching and waiting to see what happens next.
Magi's Two Cent: This is pretty much the result of a what you call a nasty feedback loop. One group feels harrassed and discriminated against and so bands togather to 'strike back' which makes another group feel the same they group up and they 'strike back.'

There is however no excuse for violence or riots. Those who have threatened, beaten or otherwise harmed others must be punished to fullest extent of the law, regardless of race, creed or nationality. The Law must be the Law for everybody or it's just a bad joke.

#2

Posted: Fri Dec 16, 2005 9:45 pm
by Anonymous
As an Australian, and living in Sydney, I can say that I do feel ashamed of what happened. What happened is an example of what generalizing and grouping an entire community can do, and on a global scale, all this is doing is saying "Look, Aussies are bullies and don't tolerate one race because of a few bad apples."

Not every lebanese person is a jackass (I grew up with a bunch of lebanese guys who would bully and push people around because they were smaller than them). Hell, some of my best friends're lebanese or turkish. Some of the nicest guys I've ever met.

I'm also asian, so I know what it's like to be on the receiving end of racist comments. The whole matter is just a reminder that even in a large multicultural environment like Sydney, anyone can be the target of racist attacks.

It really is a shame that it's come down to this, just because of a few bad apples in a large, diverse community.

#3

Posted: Sat Dec 17, 2005 4:58 am
by Narsil
Oh what a wonderful world we live in... :roll:

I'm bloody sick of racial hatred where there needn't be any... I'm actually, despite being Anglo-Celtic, a minority in my class of 14 people, by being only one of two people who even have anglo-saxony or celtic descent, with the rest mostly being from african, middle eastern, and I think one oriental, descent. Yet, one would expect, with typical conditions in the world, that this classroom would be a warzone. Not at all, just a wee bit loud, but this IS a class of people in their late-teens.

So it begs the question: why the fuck is there racial hatred when it's obvious that people can get along perfectly while being of many different descents?! And I suppose it's what makes me hate racists even more than I already would.

#4

Posted: Sat Dec 17, 2005 6:01 am
by Anonymous
Well, the main reason for the initial riots were because some lebanese guys beat up some australian lifeguards on the beach. It's been brewing for quite a few years now, with lebanese teenage males pulling the tough guy act to...well...look tough. This, I feel, is taking a huge step over the line right here.

In the Australian's defence, there's only so much someone can take before that person will get annoyed.

I'm not defending the australian's actions, nor am I trying to say that the lebanese community brought this on themselves. Like I said, a few bad apples can spoil the broth, and in this case...a few bad apples spoilt it BIG time. The australians generalizing and punishing an entire community because of what three or four people did is wrong.

And what those three or four people did to ignite the fuse is just as wrong.