Australia news live: Hannah Thomas begins legal action against state of NSW after injury during protest arrest | Australia news

Australia news live: Hannah Thomas begins legal action against state of NSW after injury during protest arrest | Australia news

Hannah Thomas begins legal action against state of NSW Daisy Dumas Hannah Thomas’ legal team has begun court proceedings against the state of New South Wales. O’Brien Criminal & Civil Solicitors has filed the proceedings with the Supreme Court and said their client would be claiming damages for malicious prosecution, assault and battery by police…

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Hannah Thomas begins legal action against state of NSW

Daisy Dumas

Daisy Dumas

Hannah Thomas’ legal team has begun court proceedings against the state of New South Wales.

O’Brien Criminal & Civil Solicitors has filed the proceedings with the Supreme Court and said their client would be claiming damages for malicious prosecution, assault and battery by police officers and misfeasance in public office.

Thomas was arrested after protesting outside SEC Plating in Belmore in June. The former Greens candidate underwent two rounds of surgery to her right eye after allegedly being injured by a police officer at the protest.

In September, she was awarded almost $22,000 in legal costs after prosecutors dropped charges against her.

Thomas’ solicitor, Peter O’Brien, said:

This case represents a deeply troubling example of what happens when the rule of law is set aside by those sworn to uphold it.

We are seeking redress not only for Ms Thomas’s individual suffering, including the ongoing injury to her right eye, but also to uphold the broader principle that police powers must never be abused.

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Tasmanian woman detained in Israel fed ‘stale bread and brown water only’, Greens senator says

Sarah Basford Canales

Sarah Basford Canales

Over in Senate estimates, the Department of Foreign Affairs (Dfat) is answering questions about an Australian woman who remains detained in Israel after the ship she was on as part of the pro-Palestinian aid flotilla was intercepted.

The Greens senator, Nick McKim, said Tasmanian woman, Madeleine Habib, who captained the Conscience ship, was allegedly told by Israeli officials she would remain “indefinitely detained” unless she signed a waiver.

A sign calling for Madeleine Habib’s release seen at Sydney airport as supporters welcomed home Australian activists from the pro-Palestinian aid flotilla. Photograph: Bianca de Marchi/EPA

McKim attempted to table email correspondence allegedly between Dfat officials and Habib’s husband, which contained “extremely disturbing” pieces of information about her detention in Israel’s Ketziot prison.

The email correspondence, which has not yet been approved for tabling, alleges Habib has been provided with “stale bread and brown water only”, McKim said.

The foreign affairs minister, Penny Wong, said she was not able to comment on specific cases and noted that Dfat officials had said the email’s information was at least 12 hours old. Wong said:

Our expectation is that Israel ensures that humane treatment to any detainees is in line with international norms.

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