Protesters carried more than聽100 Palestinian flags from Reddacliff Place over the Victoria Bridge on March 9.
Spread out and flanking both sides of the bridge, they unfurled a giant flag,聽at least 15 metres聽long, and chanted and waved the flags over the sides of the bridge for three quarters of an hour.
Prior to the march, protest organiser Phil Monsour said they were there to protest against the Brisbane City Council and its mayor, Adrian Schrinner, for complicity in genocide.
Referring to local, state and federal tiers of government, Monsour said:聽鈥淐omplicity in genocide sits at many levels.鈥
He described how, at the outset of Israel鈥檚 genocidal assault on Gaza last聽October,聽the city council had lit up the city鈥檚 landmark Story Bridge in the colours of Israel鈥檚 flag聽and,聽as the genocide unfolded, Schrinner had repeatedly refused calls to express solidarity with Palestine.
Greens鈥 mayoral candidate and former Gabba ward councillor聽Jonathan Sriranganathan聽said that 鈥渢he moral licence to commit genocide鈥 which political leaders and public figures in countries like Australia provide聽鈥渃an鈥檛 be underestimated鈥.
鈥淭he [current] mayor鈥檚 official line is, 'I stand with Israel鈥 [and] it鈥檚 quoted as if he speaks for the 2.5 million of us. But we say, 'Free, free Palestine!鈥欌
He urged protesters to support the campaign to shut down Ferra, which manufactures parts for Israel鈥檚 F-35 fighter jets at a factory in the Brisbane suburbs. 鈥淭o them and the arms manufacturers, we say, get the fuck out of Brisbane!鈥
After occupying the bridge, the march continued to West End, where protesters occupied a key intersection for half an hour.
At the intersection聽Sam Woripa Watson said聽that the colony marked聽the town limits in its early years and that聽Boundary Street 鈥渨as our appartheid wall鈥. 鈥淚t reminds us that apartheid was first developed in Queensland,鈥 they said.
Watson聽described the campaign to commemorate this history, in 2017, by painting the Aboriginal flag in the same intersection.
After repeatedly removing it, the council eventually stopped, and the flag remains there today 鈥撀爎epainted by activists when it fades.
Referring to the solidarity between First Nations people and Palestinians, Watson said:聽鈥淲hen you resist the colonisation of your land, we understand your struggle.鈥
They described Aboriginal people's support for the efforts to paint a Palestinian flag on the intersection next to the Aboriginal flag聽and criticised the council鈥檚 repeated effort to聽remove聽it.
Palestinian woman Remah Naji led the crowd in anti-colonial chants which bring the struggles together:聽鈥淔rom the River to the Sea;聽Always was, Always will be!鈥
After the speakers,聽the giant flag that聽been featured at the intersection was聽furled, revealing the Palestinian flag painted again, next to the Aboriginal flag, on the road.
鈥淭oday, you鈥檝e shown your solidarity in the colours of the Palestinian flag!鈥 declared Monsour.