Aussie police: Pro-Palestinian protesters chanted antisemitic slogans, but not ‘gas the Jews’

Hundreds of pro-Palestinian, anti-Israel protesters gathered at the Sydney Opera House, which was planned to be illuminated in the colors of the Israeli flag following the October 7 Hamas atrocities in Israel, while police advised the Jewish community to stay away, in Sydney, New South Wales, on October 9, 2023. (AP/Rick Rycroft)
Hundreds of pro-Palestinian, anti-Israel protesters gathered at the Sydney Opera House, which was planned to be illuminated in the colors of the Israeli flag following the October 7 Hamas atrocities in Israel, while police advised the Jewish community to stay away, in Sydney, New South Wales, on October 9, 2023. (AP/Rick Rycroft)

SYDNEY — Australian police say a forensic analysis did not find evidence pro-Palestinian protesters chanted “gas the Jews” outside the Sydney Opera House last year, but the investigation found some used antisemitic slogans.

Around 1,000 pro-Palestinian supporters marched through downtown Sydney in October to the city’s iconic Opera House, which the government had illuminated in the colors of the Israeli flag following the October 7 attack by Hamas.

Unverified footage on social media platforms showed a small group lighting flares and chanting some words with the subtitle “gas the Jews.” Police had engaged an independent expert in biometric science to examine the audio-visual files.

“The phrase chanted during that protest … was ‘Where’s the Jews?’ not another phrase as otherwise widely reported,” New South Wales state police Deputy Commissioner Malcolm Lanyon says during a media briefing.

Lanyon says there’s evidence of other “offensive and completely unacceptable” antisemitic statements used by protesters.

“But I think the major contention has been about the phrase that was chanted,” Lanyon says, adding the audio and visuals inspected by the police were not doctored.

People who gave statements to the police that they heard offensive slogans could not source it to any particular individual. Police will continue to investigate if offenses were committed during the protests, Lanyon says.

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