Black Lives Matter protesters should be punished for ignoring coronavirus lockdown rules Australia’s prime minister said yesterday, sparking anger by also claiming slavery never existed in the country.  Tens of thousands of Australians demonstrated this week against systemic racism at home and in the United States, and more protests are planned for the coming days. 
 Critics have called for marches to be banned on health grounds, sparking debate over freedom of speech and the country’s colonial past.  Conservative leader Scott Morrison said the protests violated social-distancing rules and hampered lifting a coronavirus shutdown, endangering the economy.  Asked during a radio interview if demonstrators should be charged, he said: “I think they should.”
 “I think people wanting to take this further this weekend are showing a great disrespect to their fellow Australians,” he said, as Victoria state reported one demonstrator in Melbourne had tested positive for coronavirus.  The Black Lives Matter movement has resonated strongly with many in Australia – a country also wrestling with the legacy of a racist past.
 During the interview, Morrison praised British explorer Captain James Cook and claimed, “there was no slavery in Australia”.  The remark was roundly rejected by historians and activists, who pointed to evidence of indentured Aboriginal workers and thousands of slaves taken from the Pacific islands to work on Australian sugar cane plantations.
 Aboriginal Australians continue to be vastly over-represented in the prison population, and there have been more than 400 indigenous deaths in custody in the last few decades alone.  Morrison did not elaborate on what charges protesters face, but authorities have warned they will at least issue fines for violating restrictions on public gatherings.
 Australia has seen sustained low levels of community transmission of the virus and only a handful of new cases now appear daily.
 Restaurants, bars and schools have reopened and many sports have restarted, though strict social distancing rules remain.
Australian officials warned Black Lives Matter supporters they could be arrested if they breach coronavirus restrictions to take part in public protests, as debate erupted over the country’s own indigenous history.
“Slavery of indigenous, men, women and children is well documented,” said Sharman Stone, a former federal lawmaker and now politics professor at Monash University. “Slaves worked in pearling, fishing, the pastoral industries and as domestic labour.”
The Black Lives Matter movement has refocused attention in Australia on the mistreatment of indigenous Australians, including Aboriginal deaths in custody.
Victoria state officials confirmed yesterday that one of eight new cases of Covid-19 reported yesterday was a man who attended the Melbourne weekend rally. More unauthorised protests are planned for today. “We will start writing tickets of A$1,000 ($700) and we can use all of our powers to move people on,” New South Wales Police Commissioner Mick Fuller told 2GB Radio. “If you don’t move on, well then you’ll be arrested.”
Morrison rejected growing calls to remove statues of white leaders, including one of the country’s first prime minister, Edmund Barton, which is located near an Aboriginal burial site. Barton played a key role in drafting the national constitution, which negated Aboriginal rights. Morrison said the initial motives of protesters were “fair”, but the push for removal of the statues was being driven by political agendas.
Australia on Tuesday recorded its first day without any community transmissions of Covid-19 since the crisis began. It has recorded 7,285 cases, including 102 deaths.
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