Brett Sutton calls for people to ignore 'fervent anti-vaxxers' as hundreds rally across Australia

Anti-vaccine protesters clashed with police on Saturday across the country, just days before Australians are due to start getting COVID-19 jabs on Monday.

Victorian Chief Health Officer Brett Sutton addresses the media during a press conference in Melbourne, Saturday, February 20, 2021

Victorian Chief Health Officer Brett Sutton addresses the media during a press conference in Melbourne, Saturday, February 20, 2021 Source: AAP

Victoria’s Chief Health Officer Brett Sutton has called for people to ignore “a really small minority” of “fervent anti-vaxxers” ahead of the start of Australia’s COVID-19 vaccine rollout.

Protesters voicing their opposition to the vaccine, which the government has said is not mandatory, clashed with police on Saturday across the country, just days before .

Hundreds of people were seen at Melbourne's Fawkner Park on Saturday, where they were met by a heavy police presence.

Twenty arrests were made, Victoria Police said. Fifteen of them will receive fines in relation to breaching directions issued by the chief health officer, while five have been charged for resisting arrest, hindering police and refusing to provide details.

Prof Sutton said Australia’s vaccination program was “our way out” of the pandemic and urged people with questions about vaccines to seek out factual information from trusted sources.

“Fervent anti-vaxxers are in a really small minority ... I am going to ignore them, frankly, and I would encourage you to do the same,” he said.
At the Melbourne rally, officers used pepper spray on some protesters when they moved beyond cordons, and at times, police appeared to lose control of the crowd, an AAP photographer on the scene said.

Speakers made comments such as "God's on our side" and "it's a fight between good and evil".

Videos taken by Reignite Democracy Australia, an organisation set up in opposition to the Victorian government's handling of the coronavirus pandemic, show a speaker congratulating the crowd for turning up.

Simultaneous protests were held in all major cities, as well as regional centres Cairns, Coffs Harbour and Albany.
At Sydney's Hyde Park, chef and conspiracy theorist Pete Evans was among the hundreds of protesters.

Evans,  for spreading false information about coronavirus and vaccines, addressed the crowd in Sydney.

Protesters marched with placards with slogans such as "herd immunity of vaccines is a scam" and "your body, your choice".

News and information about coronavirus is available in 63 languages at .

Additional reporting by SBS News.

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3 min read
Published 20 February 2021 4:38pm
Updated 20 February 2021 6:46pm
Source: AAP, SBS



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