Gulf Today

Dozens held as Australia mining protest turns violent

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MELBOURNE: Dozens of protesters were arrested and several people injured on Tuesday when police and demonstrat­ors clashed outside an internatio­nal mining conference in Melbourne.

Some 50 people were detained as mounted police forced back hundreds of protesters from the convention centre hosting the Internatio­nal Mining and Resources Conference.

Footage posted on social media showed police using pepper spray and batons to push back protesters, with one woman sent to hospital ater allegedly being trampled or kicked by a horse.

Another protester was treated for head injuries at the scene while two police were also sent to hospital for treatment, police said.

More than 300 police officers have been deployed.

“The actions (of police) have been more than justified,” Victoria Police acting commander Tim Tully told reporters ater the heated altercatio­n.

“It is in line with the training. It is in line with trying to facilitate a peaceful process,” he added.

Most of the arrests relate to obstructio­n, Tully said, but two people were detained for “slapping a police horse in the face.”

The annual mining conference is promoted as Australia’s largest industry event, with thousands of delegates from over 100 countries expected to atend.

Australia has been actively engaged in the recent wave of climate protests across the globe.

Hundreds of thousands of children, parents, and supporters rallied across the country in September for the global climate strike led by students. The Extinction Rebellion protests also have drawn thousands into the streets this month, with regular smaller targeted demonstrat­ions taking place over the last couple of weeks.

The climate change protesters accused police of heavy-handed tactics on Tuesday.

“There has been some incredibly aggressive and intimating tactics from the police,” protest organiser Emma Black told Channel Nine TV.

“Some of my friends have been thrown to the ground - people that were just standing around doing nothing,” she added.

Rio Tinto CEO Jean-sébastien Jacques told a conference in London on Monday that miners needed to find new ways to respond to increasing demands from investors and communitie­s for responsibl­e mining practices.

Inside the Internatio­nal Mining and Resources Conference, which drew 7,000 delegates from over 100 countries, several speakers pointed to changes in the industry.

Global miner BHP spoke to how it is tapping partnershi­ps to secure ethical supply chains, lowering CO2 emissions from shipping and promoting greater workforce diversity.

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