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Union says Victoria police should have had riot squad backup at anti-lockdown rally which left six officers in hospital with serious injuries, including broken bones. Photograph: Diego Fedele/Getty Images
Union says Victoria police should have had riot squad backup at anti-lockdown rally which left six officers in hospital with serious injuries, including broken bones. Photograph: Diego Fedele/Getty Images

Victoria police should have deployed riot squad to ‘horrific’ anti-lockdown protest, union says

This article is more than 2 years old

The police union will ask Victoria police why the riot squad was not deployed to a violent anti-lockdown rally in Melbourne that left several officers in hospital.

Between 500 and 700 demonstrators gathered in Richmond about midday on Saturday after the location of the protest was changed from Melbourne’s city centre at the last minute in an attempt to evade authorities.

At one stage, dozens of people ran at police in a clash that saw officers knocked to the ground and protesters doused with capsicum spray.

The Victoria police commander Mark Galliott told reporters on Saturday 235 protesters were arrested, including 193 people who would also be fined for breaching the public health orders.

He said the remaining group were arrested for a range of offences including assaulting police, riotous behaviour, weapons and drug offences.

“What we saw today was a group of protesters that came together not to protest freedoms, but simply to take on and have a fight with the police,” Galliott said.

The Police Association of Victoria secretary, Wayne Gatt, described the rally as “horrific” and said 10 police were injured with six taken to hospital.

“Significant violence confronted those individuals, we had bottles thrown at their faces; projectiles and rocks. This group came to assault the police,” he told 3AW radio. “There’s a range of injuries from dislocated shoulders, torn pectorals, broken bones [and] noses.”

Gatt said the riot squad was not deployed to help uniformed officers in Richmond, despite being in the city on standby.

“They are discussions that we will have with Victoria police,” he said.

“We’ll do work in the coming days and during the coming hours just to work out what happened and why those decisions were taken, because the last thing we want is our members to go home with serious injuries.”

Gatt said the chief commissioner’s decision to shut down public transport on Saturday was the right one.

“Had he not taken that decision, our members would have been confronted with thousands upon thousands of protesters, and those scenes would have been amplified,” he said.

Asked about a video circulating on social media appearing to show police pushing over an elderly woman and pepper-spraying her while she lay on the road, he said he had not yet seen the vision.

“I can’t comment on it specifically. I’m not going to allow my members to be criticised for the actions of these criminals yesterday, they did the best they could.”

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