Almost 40 people arrested at protest demanding release of asylum seekers from Brisbane hotel

Almost 40 protesters have been arrested during the latest protest demanding the release of asylum seekers from a Brisbane hotel.

Protesters gather to support asylum seekers detained at the Kangaroo Point Central Hotel in Brisbane, Sunday, 28 June, 2020.

Protesters gather to support asylum seekers detained at the Kangaroo Point Central Hotel in Brisbane, Sunday, 28 June, 2020. Source: AAP

Almost 40 protesters have been arrested during another rowdy protest demanding the release of asylum seekers detained at a Brisbane hotel.

Hundreds of people joined a protest march to the Kangaroo Point Central Hotel & Apartments on Sunday, where about 120 men are in long-term detention.

Police arrested 37 people after they staged a sit-in, refusing to move on after a two-hour protest permit expired.
They have been charged with refusing to comply with police orders and will face court at later dates.

The Kangaroo Point hotel has seen a succession of protests that have ramped up in the last few weeks.

Protesters are demanding the freedom of the men, brought to Australia from Manus Island and Nauru, mostly under orders that they receive specialist medical care.

Some have been confined to the hotel for a year, but have notched up almost seven years in detention overall.
Protesters at the Kangaroo Point Central Hotel in Brisbane
Protesters gather to support asylum seekers detained at the Kangaroo Point Central Hotel in Brisbane, Sunday, 28 June, 2020. Source: AAP
Other rallies staged by Refugee Solidarity Brisbane/Meanjin saw the same hotel blockaded earlier this month.

Brisbane City Greens councillor Jonathan Sri, who was arrested at a previous rally at the hotel, said protesters had told police they would move from the road if they were allowed to pass hot food to the men inside.

"The government refused, and instead of passing over the meals, decided to arrest dozens of people," he wrote on Facebook.

"Ironically, the protest organisers had made a deliberate decision not to block Main St this week in order to minimise traffic disruption, but in the end, Main St was fully blocked off not by protesters but by police cars that were queuing up to take people to the watch house."
Protesters supporting the asylum seekers detained at Brisbane's Kangaroo Point Central Hotel, Sunday, June 28, 2020.
Protesters supporting the asylum seekers detained at Brisbane's Kangaroo Point Central Hotel, Sunday, June 28, 2020. Source: AAP

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Published 29 June 2020 9:14am
Updated 29 June 2020 9:38am



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