22 Aug 2021

Protesters gather at regional border to challenge Covid-19 lockdown restrictions

6:19 pm on 22 August 2021

Hundreds of people are taking part in an anti-lockdown protest on the Queensland-New South Wales border.

Protestors those with placards gather in Sydney on August 21, 2021, following calls for an anti-lockdown protest rally amid a fast-spreading coronavirus outbreak.

Protest rallies were also held in Sydney and Melbourne yesterday. Photo: AFP

The ABC estimates about 1000 people have gathered at Jack Evans Harbour, Tweed Heads.

Up to 50 police were monitoring the mostly peaceful protest, few in the crowd were wearing masks and many were seen hugging and kissing.

Mark Westley from the Tweed area was among the crowd and said the public health directives were a "disgrace".

"It's a direct attack on my freedom of liberty, freedom to move," he said.

"It's affecting people's businesses and social lives."

Westley said it was a "direct challenge" to the fabric of Australia.

"This will be the break-up of the Commonwealth of Australia, it will be the fragmentation of Australia into disparate, fighting, disputing groups and the end of democracy as we know it," he said.

John from West Tweed said crossing the border was part of daily life in his community.

"To stop people being able to do that - particularly in the situation where there's no cases in our area - is hypocrisy," he said.

There are no active cases listed for northern NSW but a man and his two teenage children tested positive in Byron Bay after travelling there from Sydney last month.

Covid-19 was detected in the Byron Bay sewage system on Tuesday but no new cases have been found.

'Really, really distressing'

Kelsey from Pottsville said the border restrictions meant she could no longer provide for her family.

"I was working [across the border] and now my source of income has been cut off, so I'm forced to be dependent on the government," she said.

"It's really, really distressing and we're angry - we're angry about our government."

She said a border bubble was the ideal solution.

"They did it initially, we should be doing it now," she said.

'Riskiest place right now'

This protest follows demonstrations in Sydney, Brisbane and Melbourne over the past few days and comes against the backdrop of NSW's worst day so far with 830 locally acquired cases - the highest number recorded by any Australian jurisdiction in a 24-hour period.

Queensland's Deputy Premier Steven Miles said the protests are "shameful and reckless".

"That's not the kind of behaviour Queenslanders do, it's very un-Queensland like," he said.

"We've gotten through this because Queenslanders have done the right thing, we've kept each other safe," he said.

The deputy premier said the border was at the most risk of infection due to the worsening situation in NSW.

"The border is our riskiest place right now," he said.

"By having a protest there, we make the jobs of our police harder, they put their own safety at risk as well as the safety of the community and I'm frankly pretty disgusted."

In New South Wales, the police have issued 940 public health or infringement notices since yesterday.

They say most are for Sydney's lockdown protest.

Each offender has been fined more than $A5500 ($NZ5700).

-ABC

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