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Australia: Sydney suburb remains tense following four days
of conflict
By James Cogan
3 March 2005
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Tensions remain high in Sydneys south-western suburb
of Macquarie Fields following the deaths of two teenagers in a
police car chase last Friday night and four days of street fighting
between police and local youth. The violent clasheswhich
rank among the worst civil unrest in Australia in recent memoryhave
laid bare both the depth of anger in working class communities
over inequality, poverty and constant police harassment, and the
indifference and vindictiveness of the state authorities.
Matthew Robertson, 19, and a 17-year-old young man, were killed
when the allegedly stolen car they were in slammed into a tree
while trying to outrun a police pursuit in Eucalyptus Drivea
major residential street in Macquarie Fields. The alleged driver,
20-year-old Jesse Kelly, survived with minor injuries and escaped
the scene. Just weeks earlier, another police pursuit along Eucalyptus
Drive ended with a car crashing into exactly the same tree, leaving
its driver with severe injuries.
The first conflict between police and locals broke out within
hours of the car crash. Grief-stricken family and friends gathered
at the site and denounced the police for causing the deaths. The
police had pursued the boys into the narrow residential street,
at speeds approaching 140 kilometres per hour (85mph), despite
reportedly knowing their identities and addresses. Local youth
continue to allege that police deliberately rammed the back of
the boys vehicle, causing him to lose control.
The violence steadily escalated over the following three nights.
The New South Wales (NSW) state Labor government, headed by Premier
Bob Carr, responded to the obvious grief and anger in the community
not with sympathy, but with condemnations and a provocative deployment
of police into the area.
On Saturday and Sunday nights, hundreds of youth, who were
holding commemorations for the deceased boys, used rocks, petrol
bombs and other missiles to try and prevent riot squads entering
Eucalyptus Drive. Teenagers yelled you killed our mates
as they fought with the police.
On Monday, the cops carried out a military-style assault on
the streets surrounding the crash scene. From 5 p.m., dozens of
officers and riot squads sealed off a section of the car park
in the Glenquarie Town Centre near Eucalyptus Drive and set-up
a command post. Road blocks were established at key intersections,
sealing off the area. Residents attempting to drive home reported
to the WSWS that police told them they would have to leave their
cars and walk.
In the early evening, more than 50 police carried out an armed
raid on the house where Matthew Robertson had been living, arresting
three males and a young female. Over the following hours, riot
squads clashed with at least 300 youth who had rallied near the
entrance to Eucalyptus Drive. Police carried out baton charges
and let police dogs loose on the teenagers, who fought back with
bricks, rocks, golf balls and petrol bombs. By midnight, another
15 people had been arrested with at least two treated for dog
bites. A number of other youth suffered injuries.
The police operation, code-named Task Force Loudon, was ordered
on the demands of both the Labor and Liberal parties and the establishment
media. Carr and his police minister, Carl Scully, denounced the
behaviour of Macquarie Fields residents as riotous,
intolerable and unacceptable and announced
that they had ordered the police to make further arrests. The
state Liberal opposition leader, John Brogden, accused the government
of taking a softly, softly approach and declared that
the government should have sent 800 police, not 80, into the area
after the fatal crash. They should have crushed this riot
on Saturday night, he said. Weve got a riot
squad, let them do their job. Mondays editorial in
Sydney Daily Telegraph called for the wholesale roundup
of the youth who had taken part in the preceding nights of violence.
A total of 27 people in Macquarie Fields have now been arrested
since Friday night, with 81 charges laid against them. In at least
five cases, young men have been denied bail by the courts. There
are already public accusations that detained locals have been
abused by the police. Local resident Don Kelly was quoted in Tuesdays
Sydney Morning Herald stating that officers had bashed
the **** out of his 17-year-old son Shane, who had been
wrongly arrested on the assumption he was Jesse Kelly, the driver
of the crashed car.
The past two nights have been relatively calm, with no more
direct clashes in the streets. Nevertheless, there is widespread
animosity in Macquarie Fields to the provocative government statements
and police actions. While the government and media have attempted
to present the youth taking part in the street fighting as an
isolated minority, they have the sympathy of many locals. As police
arrived at the Glenquarie shopping centre on Monday, dozens of
people watched with hostility as the police were assembling. A
man walking through the car park suddenly turned and hurled a
bottle at the ground in front of a police vehicle. During the
clashes that night, hundreds of people lined the sides of the
street, prompting the police commissioner to denounce residents
for rubbernecking and providing cover for the youth.
The deputy police commissioner complained: When the police
came under fire they moved forward but they were confronted by
the community. Arrests were made very difficult. Often, offenders
were not visible to police. People were throwing rocks from behind
fences.
Underlying the tensions are the conditions of life in the area.
Macquarie Fields, situated some 40 kilometres from the centre
of Sydney, is typical of the deprived working class suburbs that
ring every major Australian city. The average weekly family income
is $700 to $799, compared with the Sydney-wide average $1,000
to $1,199. The official unemployment rate is close to 12 percent
but, in reality, only 30 percent of adults have full-time jobs.
Thousands of people live in poorly maintained public housing or
equally substandard private rental accommodation. The poverty
and disadvantage are the source of the social problems in the
area, including petty crime and substance abuse, to which the
police have responded with continuing harassment of the local
youth.
Mike Head, the Socialist Equality Party candidate for the seat
of Werriwawhich includes Macquarie Fieldsissued a
press release on Monday condemning the Carr government and the
police.
Macquarie Fields and nearby suburbs include large public
housing estates where only 30 percent of adults have jobs, and
the homes and social facilities are severely run-down after years
of funding cuts by state and federal governments. Increasingly,
the only official response to this poverty and deprivation is
stepped-up police harassment and repression, targetted against
young people in particular. A report released last November found
that 54 people died in police chases during the past decade in
the state of New South Wales, Head stated.
The SEP candidate declared that no confidence could be placed
in any official inquiry into the two boys deaths. Carr and
the police minister Scully have already placed on record their
backing for the police involved in last weekends pursuit.
Scully told the AAP news agency: The officers who handled
the (pursuit) have my support and gratitude. Even while
announcing that a coronial inquest would be conducted, Police
Superintendent John Sweeney stated that the police were blameless.
Police spokesmen have stated that the car chase was in accordance
with police protocols.
See Also:
Australia: teenagers killed
in high-speed police chase through working class suburb
[28 February 2005]
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