The Manila Times

Thousands protest Australia Day celebratio­ns

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Tens of thousands of Australian­s took to the streets on Friday, protesting a contentiou­s national holiday that also marks the arrival of European colonists more than 200 years ago.

In Sydney, Melbourne and several other cities, thousands of “Invasion Day” protesters demanded the date of the annual Australia Day celebratio­ns be changed.

The public holiday is held on January 26 every year.

For most Australian­s, it is synonymous with a day off work, a barbecue, Test match cricket, a trip to the beach, and the end of the summer holidays.

But the choice of date — which marks the arrival of European settlers at Sydney Harbor in 1788 — has become increasing­ly contentiou­s.

Indigenous activists say Europeans’ arrival heralded the start of a centuries-long campaign of cultural genocide.

In a sweltering Sydney, protesters braved 38 degrees Celsius (100 Fahrenheit) heat and the ferocious southern sun to wave black, red and yellow Aboriginal flags and chant that the land “always was, always will be” Indigenous.

A banner read, “No pride in Australia’s genocide.”

At a ceremony to grant 16 immigrants citizenshi­p, Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said that Australia Day was “our chance to pause and reflect on everything that we have achieved as a nation.”

In a nod to the controvers­y, he also hailed Indigenous Australian­s as heirs to “the world’s oldest continuous culture” and “the bedrock” of the country’s diversity.

“What an extraordin­ary privilege it is for their culture to be the beginning of our national story and for their wisdom to be a continuing part of our national life,” he said.

On the eve of Australia Day, statues of British colonial figures Captain James Cook and Queen Victoria were damaged in Melbourne.

A statue of the British explorer was felled — apparently cut off at the shins — and its plinth sprayed with the words “The colony will fall.”

A nearby likeness of British monarch Queen Victoria was daubed with red paint.

Polls show a majority of Australian­s want to keep the public holiday, but are split roughly 5050 about changing the date.

Conservati­ve opposition leader Peter Dutton recently denounced a “woke” grocery chain that stopped selling Australia Day-branded parapherna­lia.

Cricket captain Pat Cummins, perhaps the country’s most prominent sports personalit­y, has also weighed in, suggesting a more inclusive date could be found.

“I absolutely love Australia. It is the best country in the world by a mile,” he said.

“We should have an Australia Day, but we can probably find a more appropriat­e day to celebrate it.”

Just under 4 percent of Australia’s 26 million people are Indigenous.

 ?? XINHUA PHOTO ?? ‘INVASION DAY’
This file photo shows an aboriginal man at the Sydney harbor, Australia on Nov. 11, 2020. Tens of thousands of Australian­s took to the streets on Friday, Jan. 26, 2024, protesting a contentiou­s national holiday that also marks the arrival of European colonists more than 200 years ago.
XINHUA PHOTO ‘INVASION DAY’ This file photo shows an aboriginal man at the Sydney harbor, Australia on Nov. 11, 2020. Tens of thousands of Australian­s took to the streets on Friday, Jan. 26, 2024, protesting a contentiou­s national holiday that also marks the arrival of European colonists more than 200 years ago.

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