Australians share 'intimidating' encounters with police over coronavirus restrictions

A new project is collecting accounts of Australians' encounters with police since lockdown measures were toughened.

Police ask people to move along at Sydney's Bondi Beach.

Police ask people to move along at Sydney's Bondi Beach. Source: AAP

Australian legal and human rights groups are calling on each state to release clear coronavirus rules following reports of intimidating police behaviour.

COVID Policing, an online portal established by a collection of advocacy groups including Amnesty Australia, the Grata Fund and the Police Accountability Project, has been collecting complaints from Australians who feel they have been treated unfairly by the police.
NSW Police officers ask a family to move on while on patrol at a Rushcutters Bay park in Sydney.
NSW Police officers ask a family to move on while on patrol at a Rushcutters Bay park in Sydney. Source: AAP
The website has received more than 60 reports concerning police behaviour since its launch last week.

An international student in Melbourne said he was exercising at a skate park when police issued him with a $1600 fine, telling him it was acceptable to skate on the street but not in the park.

"The police never explained to us what laws we broke, they just said all parks were closed, hence we were getting a fine for using the skatepark - we didn’t cause any trouble," the student wrote.

"As an international student, I’m scared of so many things - will they find me and lock me up, not being able to pay the fine, my visa getting cancelled - and my mental health is deteriorating since I am too scared to go out to exercise."
A Queensland woman also reported feeling unsafe when she was pulled over by a police officer who she said ignored social distancing protocols by leaning inside her car.

"His face and body were approximately 30 centimetres away from my face... his hands were also inside my vehicle, resting on my door trim," she wrote. 

"I didn't feel safe to ask him to step back, as he was already condescending and not interested in anything I had to say, so I didn't want to further agitate him by asking him to stand back."
A Melbourne woman said she had also felt intimidated by police, who she said followed her with their car and questioned why she was outside - despite the fact she was obviously jogging in her exercise gear. 

"I felt like I was doing something wrong and had to go back, I felt angry that they had targeted me," she wrote.

"I wondered if a white, caucasian woman would’ve been followed like this and questioned. I was alone with no one around, in broad daylight and not doing anything illegal."

'An extreme lack of clarity'

Tim O'Connor of Amnesty International Australia has been monitoring the complaints closely and is now building a base of evidence based on the public's reports.
Tim O'Connor of Amnesty International Australia is calling on each police force to release a definitive list of coronavirus restrictions.
Tim O'Connor of Amnesty International Australia is calling on each police force to release a definitive list of coronavirus restrictions. Source: AAP
"We’re calling for some clear guidelines from the police, which, unfortunately, no force across the country has yet made public," he told SBS News.

The group is calling on each state to implement a 'sunset clause' on their coronavirus legislation, which would see restrictions automatically lifted once the pandemic is over.

Mr O'Connor said it was particularly concerning that many complaints had been suggestive of racial profiling, particularly against Indigenous Australians.
"We’ve been getting reports over the past 24 hours or so of police going around house to house in Tennant Creek in the Northern Territory, counting how many people are in the house and telling them to leave," he said. 

"We’ve also had reports about the Australian Defence Force being mobilised in remote communities in the Northern Territory." 

Also contributing to the project is the Grata Fund, a public interest litigation fund that advocates for Australians who could not otherwise afford the court process.
Victoria Police speak to a man at St Kilda beach in Melbourne.
Victoria Police speak to a man at St Kilda beach in Melbourne. Source: AAP
The Grata Fund's Belinda Lowe has said many of the reports received so far could be characterised as "aggressive, interrogatory and forceful" on the part of the police.

"We have heard stories of people being pulled up for drawing rainbows on a footpath at the front of a house or sitting in a car to look at the beach and seen data that show communities of colour, in western Sydney for example, are being policed at much higher rates than communities that have higher rates of COVID-19," Ms Lowe told SBS News.

She called for dedicated third-party bodies to be established to monitor police activities for the remainder of the pandemic.
"Meaningful transparency and oversight means that police cannot investigate police," Ms Lowe said. 

"Governments should take steps to ensure there is transparency in the operations of police and fully functional independent investigative bodies should be set up or funded with proper power to investigate police complaints." 

Queensland and Victoria's police departments have already announced they will regularly review all coronavirus fines issued.

Victoria's Depurty Commissioner Shane Patton said last week that police should use their discretion in enforcing the COVID-19 rules. 

He said fines would be reviewed by senior police on a daily basis. 

"We're going to be every day looking at these infringements to make sure we've got it right because I want to be absolutely certain we do have it right and that's why I'm personally going to be looking at the entire list of infringements every day," he told the Herald Sun. 

NSW Police Commissioner Mick Fuller advised people earlier this month that if they had doubts, to stay home.  

"A good rule of thumb is that if you are questioning whether you should be doing something, it is best to give it a miss," he said.  

He also said the majority of fines issued so far were to people who had already been warned about breaching the restrictions. 

People in Australia must stay at least 1.5 metres away from others and gatherings are limited to two people unless you are with your family or household.

If you believe you may have contracted the virus, call your doctor (don’t visit) or contact the national Coronavirus Health Information Hotline on 1800 020 080. If you are struggling to breathe or experiencing a medical emergency, call 000.

SBS is committed to informing Australia’s diverse communities about the latest COVID-19 developments. News and information is available in 63 languages at .


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6 min read
Published 22 April 2020 4:07pm
By Claudia Farhart


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