Aboriginal protester arrested during King's Sydney tour
- Published
An Aboriginal protester has been arrested at the Sydney Opera House as crowds awaited a glimpse of the King and Queen on the final day of their tour in Australia.
Thousands of people packed the harbourside forecourt to see the royal couple visit on Tuesday afternoon.
Before they arrived, Wayne Wharton, a prominent Indigenous activist from Brisbane, was arrested after shouting anti-monarchist slogans and refusing a police order to move on.
It comes as backlash over an Aboriginal senator's heckling of King Charles in Canberra on Monday intensifies.
- Published21 October
- Published22 October
- Published22 October
Mr Wharton had shouted "he鈥檚 not my King", echoing the words of independent Senator Lidia Thorpe the day before.
The crowd waiting for the royals - many clutching Australian flags - shouted back "God save the King".
Mr Wharton had also protested outside the church service the royals attended on Sunday.
Thorpe's protest has been praised by some Indigenous activists as brave, but condemned by other prominent Aboriginal Australians as "embarrassing" and disrespectful. It has also been roundly criticised by her parliamentary peers.
On Tuesday, Thorpe said she had deleted a violent cartoon of the King that was posted to her Instagram account, describing it as "inappropriate" and posted by a staff member without her knowledge.
Outside the Sydney Opera House, onlookers applauded officers when Mr Wharton was arrested and placed into a police van.
Many of the hundreds there had been queuing since early on Tuesday, a few draped in British flags. Others had accessorised with royal-themed jewellery and handbags.
鈥淲e want to celebrate our country and all the people in it,鈥 said Karen Clark, with her little boys Benjamin and Harrison who were both wearing crowns and capes with a fake fur trim.
鈥淲e were brought up with the King, we celebrate the King鈥檚 birthday with the boys - it鈥檚 fun to have high tea and dress up in our best outfits.鈥
Christie Delaney also lined up for several hours. Her reward? Shaking Queen Camilla鈥檚 hand.
鈥淚 got a lot of excitement out of it to be honest... seeing somebody so famous," she told the 大象传媒.
"To be able to shake her hand and actually say hello to her and welcome her to Australia - that's something else isn鈥檛 it?鈥
Bettina Bethuel, who came with her friend Taja Shephard, said: 鈥淢y father was from Liverpool and I鈥檝e always been interested in the royals."
Taja saw the heckling by Thorpe on TV and wasn鈥檛 impressed.
鈥淚 thought it was a little rude but I suppose she makes her point for Indigenous people,鈥 she said. 鈥淏ut I don鈥檛 think it鈥檚 appropriate how she behaved.鈥
Nellie Pollard-Wharton, who was with her father as he was arrested, said it was "laughable" to watch crowds "cheering as he鈥檚 put into a paddy wagon [police van] for standing up for his rights".
"[We] need to keep resisting so we can have treaties, so we can have our rights heard, so our young people and our men and women in custody stop dying, so that our health outcomes improve... so we can actually self-determine," she told the 大象传媒.
On the other side of the city, King Charles began Tuesday with a visit to the National Centre of Indigenous Excellence in Redfern, where he met with Aboriginal elders.
He later attended a community picnic in Parramatta, where the monarch had a go at cooking sausages on a barbeque before meeting a sheepdog.
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