An extraordinary meeting of Merri-bek City Council, in Melbourne's north, on November 8 condemned Israelās genocide against Palestinians in the Gaza Strip. Merri-bek is the first Victorian council to fly the Palestinian flag.
The Ā was movedĀ by Socialist Alliance Councillor Sue Bolton and supported by independent Councillors Monica Harte and James Conlan,Ā who helped draft it. Council will nowĀ writeĀ to the prime minister and foreign ministerĀ urgingĀ them to join the global call for an immediate ceasefire.Ā Bolton told Ā鶹“«Ć½ she believes it is a win for all those āstanding up against genocideā.
The motion calls for: an immediate ceasefire; for the siege on Gaza to be lifted to allow access to food, water, fuel, electricity, medical supplies and construction materials; all Palestinian and Israeli hostages to be released; a political resolution to the decades-long conflict; and an end to all military, economic, political and diplomatic ties with Israel until it complies with its obligations under international law.
It also asked the council to explore options to cancel contracts with any companies that supportĀ or profit from Israelās illegal occupation of Palestine.
AĀ packed gallery erupted in a standingĀ ovation when the motion was passedĀ 6ā4, with Bolton, Harte, Conlan and Greens councillors Angelica Panopoulos, Adam Pulford and Mark Riley voting in favour.
Labor Councillor Lambros Tapinos and three right-wing independents Oscar Yildiz, Helen Davidson and Helen Pavlidis voted against.
āIt was clear from the reactions today that this motion is so important on a deep emotional levelā, Bolton said. āThis is one of the most marginalised communities in Australia, and people feel that their lives donāt matter as much as others.ā
A spirited community rally beforehand drew hundreds. Many residents spoke, including Palestinian-Australians Tanya Abo-Shaban andĀ Omar Jaber Tafesh NaāWal,Ā Lebanese community leader Leila Alloush,Ā unionist Mick Bull and Jewish resident James Crafti.
Residents marched to Coburg Town Hall, where police only allowed 50 people in to observe the meeting.
There were several impassioned speeches in support of Boltonās motion. Palestinian and Brunswick resident Catherine Wave said she feels āalone and abandonedā by the government for its āinaction and complicityā with Israel.
Zane, a Palestinian resident in Coburg, spoke of his āgriefā for his home country and family who are now āscattered in south Gaza and unable to meet their basic needsā. Zaneās family are in the Gaza strip and were driven out of their original homes by Zionist militias in 1948.
Jordana Silverstein, a Jewish resident from Brunswick, said she is ādevastatedā byĀ Israelās war.Ā āMy Jewishness is built around solidarity, justice and love ā¦ How do we say to Palestinians in Gaza that we have not forgotten them? That we will also share the horror of what is happening to civilians and use words like āgenocideā and āwar crimesā.
āRaising the Palestinian flag tells Palestinians that we know that this is a flag of justice and anti-racism and solidarity and that we are proud to be alongside Palestinians and, seeing it fly, will make all of us safer.ā
Hadfield resident David Glanz, also Jewish, said: āIt is not antisemitic to condemn ethnic cleansing, the bombing of children and women, hospitals and to fly the Palestinian flagā.
Tapinos argued that the āissueā is āvery complicatedā and that Australiaās response should be āleft to the federal governmentā.
Yildiz argued councils should focus on āroads, rates and rubbishā, and said: āWe are not the United Nationsā.
Harte Ā thatĀ he supported a motionĀ condemning Russiaās invasion of Ukraine at last yearās Australian Local Government Association conference.
Harte, originally from Ireland, reflected on that countryās partition, saying that while it remains divided, āthey have peace, while Palestine is seeing genocideā.Ā She said standing up for justice is ācouncil businessā. This debate āwould never happen in an Irish council, because they have known repression and the country is full of Palestinian flagsā.
āWhile there are historical complexities, the basic issues are not complex,ā Bolton said. āYou donāt need a university degree to know you shouldnāt kill civilians. But Israel appears to be trying to kill as many Palestinians in Gaza as it can, until world opinion forces them to stop.ā
How many civilians the West will allow Israel to kill before it says enough, is the macabre question.
āLike many peace movements, ordinary people are rising up to call on Israel to stop carrying out genocide and call on the governments to stop supporting genocide,ā said Bolton.
She pointed to the āhistory of councils supporting peaceā, citing East Timorās independence struggle against Suhartoās military and militias.
āPeace is everyoneās business. When countriesā leaders refuse to call for a ceasefire and an end to the genocide, communities have to demand they do. That means unions, local councils and many other organisations.ā