‘This is a moment’: New Zealand reckons with aftermath as smoke clears on violent protests
Occupation a confronting shift in tone from first two years of pandemic, which were characterised by high support for government
We will not be defined by this," prime minister Jacinda Ardern said, as New Zealand's parliament grounds descended into chaos, fire and violence in a shocking end to the anti-mandate protests that have occupied the capital city's centre.
An undercurrent of violence had simmered throughout the weeks-long Ottawa-inspired occupation, which was blighted by abusive behaviour, conspiracy theories, and death threats. On Wednesday, riot police moved in with pepper spray and rubber bullets, and the powder keg exploded. Protesters set their tents alight, and lit a bonfire beneath the parliamentary children's playground. People could be heard whooping and yelling, burn it down, burn it down." As fires burned across the lawns, some protesters worked to spread them and set more tents alight, while a woman screamed What are you doing? People will get hurt". Gas bottles exploded as they were consumed by the blaze. At a bonfire next to the cenotaph war memorial, protesters threw tents, trash and wooden pallets on the flames. Others hurled anything within reach at lines of riot police: chairs, fireworks, rubbish bins, and paving stones ripped from the parliamentary paths.
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