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Australia climate protester’s jail term overturned

16-03-2023

Bureau Report

SYDNEY: A climate protestor jailed in a case that sparked uproar in Australia has had her sentence overturned on appeal.

Deanna “Violet” Coco was given a 15 month prison term for blocking a lane of traffic on the Sydney Harbour Bridge last April.

Advocates had argued the decision was disproportionate and part of a broader crackdown on protests in the country.

A judge on Wednesday threw out the sentence, saying it was based on false information provided by police.

Coco and three others had staged the protest last year to draw attention to the climate emergency. She and others had parked a hired truck on one lane of the bridge, before climbing on top and lighting a flare.

She was charged under new New South Wales (NSW) laws which introduced harsher penalties for protests on critical infrastructure such as roads, rail lines, tunnels and bridges.

Similar laws have been introduced in other states too.

NSW Police argued the protest had caused a massive inconvenience and had ensnared paramedics in route to an emergency, a claim they have since withdrawn.

Coco pleaded guilty to breaching traffic laws, lighting a flare and disobeying police orders to move on.

When sentencing her in December, Magistrate Allison Hawkins said the 32-year-old let the “entire city suffer” with her “selfish emotional actions”, and repeatedly cited the claim still tendered as fact by police then that the protest had blocked an ambulance.

She also denied Coco bail pending her appeal, a decision reversed after the activist spent almost two weeks in prison.

When deciding her appeal, Judge Mark Williams questioned police assertions on the scale of the disruption and rejected suggestions Coco was a “danger to the community”.

He ruled that she had been imprisoned on a “false factual basis”, setting aside the sentence and instead imposing a 12 month good behavior bond.

Coco has now indicated she will seek compensation from NSW Police.

Judge Williams also reduced the sentence of Alan Russell Glover who had participated in the protest with Coco.

The case has drawn condemnation from the UN’s special rapporteur on peaceful assembly who said he was “alarmed” by Coco’s sentence.

“Peaceful protesters should never be criminalized or imprisoned,” Clément Voule said in December. The NSW state government has defended the legislation as necessary to preserve people’s “way of life”.

For 28 minutes in April, Deanna “Violet” Coco blocked a single lane of rush hour traffic on the Sydney Harbour Bridge, calling for greater action on climate change.

Those 28 minutes would cost her a 15-month jail sentence.

Last week – in a move that has drawn international criticism, an Australian judge sent Coco to prison after she pleaded guilty to breaching traffic laws, lighting a flare and disobeying police orders to move on.

The climate activist had made an “entire city suffer” with her “selfish emotional actions”, Magistrate Allison Hawkins said. “You do damage to your cause when you do childish stunts like this.”

Coco will be eligible for parole in eight months, but her lawyer plans to challenge the sentence, which he says is “extraordinarily harsh” and “baseless”. (Int’l Monitoring Desk)

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