Australians protest 'Invasion Day' in breach of COVID-19 rules
Thousands of people attend an Australia Day protest in Melbourne on Jan. 26, 2021. (AFP Photo)


Thousands of Australians gathered Tuesday in protest of the country's national day which celebrates the anniversary of the arrival of the British to Australia and the start of colonization, known to its Indigenous population as "Invasion Day".

Officially recognized as Australia Day, rallies are held annually on Jan. 26 to draw attention to the injustices faced by those Indigenous to the country, with protestors calling on the government to change the date of the national holiday.

The celebration of the origins of the modern nation is a time of mourning for Indigenous Australians, who have inhabited the land for 65,000 years and view the arrival of British settlers in 1788 as the beginning of two centuries of pain and suffering.

Thousands of people gathered at a central Sydney park in defiance of police threats of fines and arrests for breaching a 500-person limit on gathering in public places, though organizers called off a march through the city that usually follows. Police said five people were arrested, of whom one was charged with assaulting a police officer.

Authorities earlier refused to waive the cap on numbers, despite no new cases being detected in Australia's biggest city for more than a week. Chants of "Sovereignty was never ceded" and "No justice, no peace" rang out while others held up placards with slogans including "Not a Date to Celebrate" and "Black Lives Matter".

"For us it represents cultural genocide. Our families being ripped apart. Years and years of disease and famine. And the intergenerational impacts of that are still being felt today," Gomeroi man Dylan Booth told Agence France-Presse (AFP).

Thousands more attended protests in major cities across the country, with rally organizers encouraging attendees to wear face masks and maintain social distance where possible. The date of Australia Day – which was only formally established as a national holiday in 1994 – has attracted increasingly heated debate in recent years.

The occasion is staunchly defended by right-wing commentators and retains strong support from the country's conservative government. Prime Minister Scott Morrison, who earlier in the week chided Cricket Australia for dropping the name from promotions for its Jan. 26 matches, said history "changed forever" in 1788 and there was "no escaping or cancelling this fact".

"For better and worse, it was the moment where the journey to our modern Australia began," he told an official ceremony in Canberra. "And it is this continuing Australian journey that we recognise today."