The (T-Pan) marched in this year鈥檚 Tas Pride Parade on February 10, calling聽for a ceasefire in Gaza and for queer solidarity with Palestine.
Around 30 T-Pan supporters marched through the CBD with their banner 鈥淨ueer as in Free Palestine鈥 and handed out flyers. They said 鈥渜ueer as in Free Palestine鈥 was a rejection of pink washing and criticised Israel for its 鈥渃ooption鈥 of Pride 鈥渨hile committing genocide鈥.
Palestinian queer advocacy group Al-Qaws said the term 鈥減ink washing鈥 was 鈥渃oined by Palestinian activists who sought to draw attention to 鈥 how the Israeli state and its supporters use the language of gay and trans rights to direct international attention away from the oppression of Palestinians.鈥
For example, the Israeli government posted on X in October: 鈥淟ooking forward to seeing Hamas raise the rainbow flag in Gaza鈥 to deflect condemnation of its genocidal war crimes in Gaza.
The TasPride march followed T-Pan鈥檚 weekly vigil calling for an immediate ceasefire and remembering the Palestinian victims.
T-Pan was formed in the wake of the October 7 incursion by Hamas and Israel鈥檚 assault on Gaza in which 30,000 Palestinians have been killed and the Gaza strip destroyed.
The group has held about 20 weekly vigils for the victims of this war.
Adel Youssif, co-founder of T-Pan, said: 鈥淲e are not far away here in Tasmania. Our government is in this conflict: it is selling arms to Israel. We are right there!鈥
Labor has been vocal in supporting Israel, but has been forced changed its position at the United Nations, voting in December for a ceasefire in the General Assembly after abstaining in October.
The Greens said Australian-made equipment may be in use in Israel鈥檚 assault on Gaza. have brought a case to the Federal Court to make public all permits for military equipment granted since October 7.
According to the NSW Greens Senator David Shoebridge, Australian arms and ammunition exports to Israel was .
T-Pan鈥檚 weekly vigils have been passionate. Zeinab, who is often on the microphone, told 91自拍论坛 she had not been involved before the most recent war.
When she went to her first rally she 鈥渋mmediately started crying鈥 as soon as she saw her mum as it was 鈥渟o hard to contain our emotion鈥.
Zeinab and her mother Nagham are refugees from Iraq. They fled Baghdad in 2008 as the violence kept building, after the 2003 United States-Australian invasion.
Zeinab said that it is 鈥渨hy I feel more connected to it [Gaza].
鈥淢y mum told me all about the attack on Iraq in 2003; it was really hard to hear. Now I鈥檓 at the age where I can actually contribute. And they鈥檝e [the Palestinians] been experiencing this occupation for much longer and this genocide for much longer.鈥
T-Pan has been organising 鈥渄ie-ins鈥, with 鈥渂odies鈥 in shrouds representing the tens of thousands of dead Palestinians, at various events and buildings, including Salamanca Market and Taste of Tasmania.
A die-in outside the ABC criticised the national broadcaster鈥檚 biased coverage of Israel鈥檚 the assault on Gaza.
鈥淔or four months now we have seen nothing but one-sided coverage, the perpetuation of racist stereotypes, debunked information and Israeli/US propaganda,鈥 T-Pan said.
The group is concerned that journalist Lebanese-Australian Antoinette Lattouf was fired 鈥渇or sharing a Human Rights Watch post on her social media about the war in Gaza鈥.
[Get in touch with 聽and get involved.]