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Australian senator who accused Britain’s king of genocide rejects censure

Indigenous activist Lidia Thorpe vowed to repeat her comments should Britain’s ‘colonising king’ return to Australia

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Australian Senator Lidia Thorpe stages a protest last month as Britain’s King Charles attends a parliamentary reception in Canberra. Photo: Reuters
Australia’s Senate on Monday censured an indigenous woman parliamentarian over her protest against King Charles during his visit to the parliament last month when she accused the British monarch of genocide.
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Independent senator and indigenous activist Lidia Thorpe shouted that she did not accept the king’s sovereignty over Australia moments after he delivered a speech in which he paid his “respects to the traditional owners of the lands”.

Both the ruling Labor party and the opposition coalition supported the censure motion, which will not have any legal or constitutional consequences and is only considered as a symbolic move by lawmakers when they disagree on a member’s conduct.

Thorpe’s protest was disruptive and she did not respect the democratic institutions, the motion said. The British monarch is Australia’s head of state.

Thorpe, a DjabWurrung Gunnai Gunditjmara woman, called the members who supported the motion “hypocrites” and said the censure process was a ploy to divert attention away from the real issues affecting Australia.

If the colonising king were to come to my country again, our country, then I’ll do it again
Australian Senator Lidia Thorpe

“I’ll do it again, and I’ll do it every time,” Thorpe shouted in parliament when Simon Birmingham, the opposition leader in the Senate, was making his comments on the motion.

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