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Victoria Police estimated 3,500 protesters gathered in Melbourne.
Protesters vow to continue
Shamikh Badra, a University of Sydney political science PhD student originally from Gaza, was worried for the safety of his elderly mother and the rest of his family.

Palestine Action Group estimated a crowd of more than 10,000 at the Sydney rally, while NSW Police placed that number at approximately 8,000. Source: AAP / Sitthixay Ditthavong
“We don’t want a temporary ceasefire, we want to stop this genocide after two years of suffering and two years of watching and worrying,” he told AAP as protesters banged on drums and waved Palestinian flags.
He hoped the lull in constant bombardment would provide a window of reprieve for millions of Palestinians stuck in Gaza and that expanded sanctions would be immediately placed on Israel.
PAG organisers said the rallies would continue but would be scaled back to monthly instead of weekly.
“We have an obligation here in Australia to continue fighting.”
NSW Supreme court ruling undercuts ‘right to protest’, organisers say
Police said the event, which was estimated to have an attendance of 40,000 people, posed a crowd crush risk.

Abubakir Rafiq, an Australian participant in the Global Sumud flotilla, spoke to pro-Palestinian protesters in Hyde Park, recounting being held in an Israeli prison alongside Palestinian inmates. Source: AAP / Sitthixay Ditthavong
Organisers argued the march could proceed safely if the crowd was divided into smaller groups.
“We are also incredibly concerned that the Court of Appeal has reversed over 25 years of anti-protest law, which now means that if a court provision order is granted, anyone who marches to those locations will be held in contempt,” she told SBS News.
NSW Police tried to challenge a pro-Palestinian protest across the Sydney Harbour Bridge in August, but were unsuccessful.
Nearly 100 protests in two years
“History will show that the people in this country did everything they could to oppose this genocide and our government decided not to listen to the will of the people.”