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Union Jack set on fire while Australia marks national day of mourning for Queen

As a memorial service was held for the late monarch in Parliament House, protests were underway in multiple cities.

Alana Calvert
Thursday 22 September 2022 04:35 BST
The Union Jack was set on fire as Australia marked a national day of mourning for Queen Elizabeth II (Mark Baker/AP)
The Union Jack was set on fire as Australia marked a national day of mourning for Queen Elizabeth II (Mark Baker/AP) (AP)

A Union Jack flag was set on fire by protesters while Australia marked a national day of mourning for the late Queen.

A memorial service to celebrate the life of Her Majesty was held in Canberra on Thursday – a ā€œone-offā€ public holiday announced by the prime minister after her death – as anti-monarchy demonstrations were held in Melbourne, Sydney, Brisbane, Adelaide and the nation’s capital.

Prior to the memorial service at Canberra’s Parliament House, footage was shared on social media of the Union Jack being burned at a park in Melbourne – the starting point for a lunchtime Abolish the Monarchy march.

A video was also shared by a Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC) journalist of an Australian flag being set on fire in Brisbane as crowds chanted ā€œalways was, always will be Aboriginal landā€.

Prime minister Anthony Albanese and governor-general David Hurley, who had only recently returned from the Queen’s funeral, were joined in Canberra by state and territory leaders, ministers, former ministers, ambassadors, chief justices and former governor-generals.

Following a minute’s silence and the singing of the national anthem Advance Australia Fair, Mr Hurley called the day of mourning one of sadness but ā€œalso a day of reflectionā€. He went on to acknowledge that the country’s First Nations people have been ā€œshaped by the colonial historyā€.

ā€œIn considering the unifying role Her Majesty played, I’d acknowledge that her passing has prompted different reactions for some in our community. I’m conscious to respect that many First Nations Australians shaped by the colonial history have brought a reconciliation journey. That is a journey we as a nation must complete,ā€ the governor-general told mourners.

Her (Majesty's) passing has prompted different reactions for some in our community. I’m conscious to respect that many First Nations Australians shaped by the colonial history have brought a reconciliation journey.

Governor-general David Hurley

ā€œAnd so to her legacy for us in Australia, I have found myself asking whether the unparalleled reaction of the last 13 days has been just a moment in time, a unique reaction driven by Her Majesty’s remarkable life, longevity, and service, or is there a greater lesson to be drawn? I’d suggest that a lesson for us can be found by being both reflective and prospective in our considerations, to look back and admire and to look ahead and contemplate.ā€

In his speech, Mr Albanese said the Queen had sought to understand Australia during her 16 trips to the nation during her 70-year reign.

ā€œMonuments to the Queen dot our landscape. The name of Elizabeth lives in nearly every city and town. Perhaps the greatest tribute we can offer her family and her memory is not a marble statue or a metal plaque. It is a renewed embrace of service to community. A truer understanding of our duty to others. A stronger commitment to respect for all,ā€ the prime minister said.

ā€œThis would be a most fitting memorial, to a magnificent life of service to others. May Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II rest in eternal peace.ā€

Meanwhile, organisers of the Melbourne rally, which included Warriors of the Aboriginal Resistance (WAR) and Fighting in Solidarity Towards Treaties group (FISTT), called for the abolition of the monarchy and an end to ā€œracist, colonial imperialismā€ which stole from Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples.

ā€œWhile they mourn the Queen, we mourn everything her regime stole from us: our children, our land, our loved ones’ lives, our sacred sites, our histories,ā€ WAR said in a statement.

ā€œWe stand against racist colonial imperialism and its ongoing effects on us as Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples.

ā€œWe stand in solidarity and rage with other peoples across the world who have been oppressed, murdered, enslaved and vilified under the British colonial enterprise. We do not want to be a part of the Stolen(common)Wealth.ā€

FISTT spokesperson and New South Wales Greens Upper House candidate Lynda-June Coe called the sudden declaration of a day of mourning for the late monarch ā€œa real insult to First Nations peopleā€.

The Wiradjuri and Badu Island woman told the ABC that since the death of the Queen, Indigenous peoples’ ā€œresponses and experiences to colonisation and dispossessionā€ had been silenced and erased.

ā€œOur mob have been calling for our Day of Mourning to be recognised for over 80 years, since 1938,ā€ she said. ā€œIt really does show that there are two sides of this story and ours unfortunately continues to be silenced and erased completely.ā€

In Adelaide, a protester was ejected from Government House for holding a sign and writing ā€œAbolish the monarchyā€ in one of the Queen’s condolence books. Footage shared by 7News Adelaide showed the man being escorted from the scene by three police officers.

Despite significant pressure to do so throughout Australia’s recent history,Ā no treaty has been negotiated between First Nations peoples. Australia is the only ex-British nation that has not ratified a treaty with its Indigenous peoples – which would require the government to legitimise Aboriginal nations as separate to the nation of Australia.

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