Thank you for following our live coverage of the last day of Israeli President Isaac Herzog’s controversial Australian visit.
The president’s final engagement was a Jewish community event in Melbourne’s Southbank, where protesters played a cat and mouse game with police, before rallying in their masses at Flinders Street Station.
Here’s a look back at what we covered today:
- Herzog declared Prime Minister Anthony Albanese and his government “serious partners” in the global fight against antisemitism, in stark contrast to the fury unleashed by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in the immediate aftermath of the Bondi terrorist attack.
- A fringe anti-Zionist group leaked details of the Israeli president’s visit to Melbourne before the event, sparking a game of cat and mouse between pro-Palestine protesters and police in the streets across the city.
- As Herzog wound up his four-day state visit to fly home to Jerusalem, up to 10,000 pro-Palestinian protesters converged outside Flinders Street Station from 5pm, calling for his arrest.
- The mass evening gathering brought one of the busiest sections of the city to a standstill for the second time this week – following a 7000-strong protest on Monday against Herzog’s visit – but did not devolve into the angry scenes that took place in Sydney on Monday.
- There were a handful of scuffles, and police said they expected to charge a 39-year-old man from Coburg North on summons with assaulting police. The officer was not injured.
- The protest was otherwise peaceful and police did not need to use special move-on and search powers.
Thank you again for following our live coverage. I’m Cassandra Morgan, signing off.