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Sydney's Black Lives Matter protest 'banned' over coronavirus fears

NSW's highest court has effectively banned a protest about Aboriginal deaths in custody that was expected to draw thousands to the Sydney CBD because it breached coronavirus restrictions.

About 5000 people were expected to rally at Sydney Town Hall at 3pm on Saturday in honour of US man George Floyd and Australian man David Dungay Jr.

But Supreme Court Justice Des Fagan on Friday ruled the Stop All Black Deaths in Custody rally, organised by Raul Bassi, was not an authorised public assembly.

Justice Fagan said he appreciated the issue and that it was designed to be concurrent with similar events in other countries.

Protesters shout slogans and hold up placards during a rally for justice in Sydney against the deaths of members of the Aboriginal community in Australia and the death of George Floyd, an unarmed black man who died in police custody in the US city of Minneapolis which has sparked violent protests across the US.
Protestors hit Sydney's CBD on Tuesday night. Source: Getty Images

"I don't diminish the importance of the issues and no one would deny them in normal circumstances," he said.

"No one denies them that but we're talking about a situation of a health crisis."

Other countries hadn't respected coronavirus and had suffered "markedly worse" than Australia, he said.

Australians had also given up their livelihoods, pursuits, endeavours and rights to worship to help halt the spread of COVID-19, the judge said.

"Everyone has given up a lot in order to defeat the disease on the basis that this is best advice health officials have given us," he said.

Mr Bassi said he and police agreed on Thursday the protest could go ahead.

NSW Chief Health Officer Kerry Chant told the court a protest of 10,000 could "increase the risk of community-acquired infections and the seeding of clusters".

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