Thank you, Speaker—members of this place who are from the Labor Party, who are complicit in this genocide in Gaza. It is genuinely remarkable. There is more passion in this place from members of the Labor Party about defending their own reputation than there is in this place about the murder of 35,000 Palestinians. Let’s be real about this. You know what’s affecting social cohesion? An Australian government sending arms and weapons and ammunition, and trading in arms with a country carrying out a genocide that sees people starved to death, lose the energy to breathe and burnt alive, and mothers and fathers losing their children.
Mr CHANDLER-MATHER (Griffith) (09:11): At the very least, this government should recognise the state of Palestine. Really, the question is: what is the red line for Labor when it comes to Israel’s genocide in Gaza? How many kids does Israel have to burn alive before Labor will literally take any action against Israel? What will it take for it to stop giving public money to Israeli weapons companies? What will it take for it to stop sending arms and ammunition to Israel?
To get the human consequences of this action, here’s just one moment from the Rafah massacre, as quoted in CNN:
A video filmed for CNN in the hospital courtyard shows several body bags laid on the ground with dozens of anguished people including men, women and children crowded around their late loved ones.
People are seen crouching over the body bags, with some caressing their loved one’s lifeless bodies. At least one baby’s head can be seen sticking out of a bag, as the woman beside it shouts: “My whole family has perished.”
… … …
Lifting the baby boy’s body to the camera, Mahmoud Abu Taha cries out, “this is who they are targeting. This is their objective. This is the generation they’re looking for. This is the safe Rafah they talk about.”
… … …
Another eyewitness says a five-day-old boy named Ghaith Abu Rayya was killed in the airstrike. The footage shows him opening a small body bag to reveal the infant’s head, saying his body has been dismembered.
“We are all alone. Nobody cares about us,” he cries.
He is seen opening another body bag next to Ghaith’s, sobbing, and saying, “my beloved Ramy,” who he says is Ghaith’s 33-year-old father.
This is just one moment for the 35,000 people—Palestinians—that have been murdered in Palestine by the Israeli government.
But what’s most remarkable about the reactions from members on either side in this House is the lack of responsibility. In response to the speech of the member for Melbourne, the Leader of the Australian Greens, we sat here and heard: ‘Oh, no. The government doesn’t back the invasion of Gaza. No. No. We don’t do any of that.’ Well, take some responsibility. You are the government. You signed a $917 million weapons contract with Elbit Systems in February this year. The CEO of Elbit Systems, the blacklisted Israeli weapons company, has said recently, ‘We have seen increased interest in our weapons recently because they’re in operational use in Gaza’—as in killing Palestinians.
In February this year, you allowed for $1.5 million worth of arms and ammunition to be sent to Israel. And you say, ‘Oh, no. That didn’t happen’! It’s from the government’s own data. There are other country that can expel ambassadors when countries engage in genocide, but, no, there’s nothing here. Those are actions that this government could take. You could recognise the state of Palestine, and you sit here and pretend that you have no power. Let’s be real about this: every time Israel massacre civilians and burn children alive, they look around the world and wait for the consequences—and none come from governments like Australia. That’s why they know they can get away with it.
As the member for Melbourne said, history will remember people in this place and what they did. They’ll ask, ‘What did you do when there was a massacre and a genocide going on in Gaza, when mothers and fathers held the lifeless bodies of their children in their hands who had starved to death because they had run out of energy to breathe as a result of Israel’s engineered famine?’ They’ll ask: ‘What did you do? What did you do in this place?’ It’s remarkable—I’m sure we’re going to hear some members in this place get up after this and talk about social cohesion, and they’re going to say words like, ‘We want to oppose the invasion of Rafah.’ Well, sending weapons to Israel, sending money—
Mr Watts: That’s a lie!
Mr CHANDLER-MATHER: A lie! Here we go; a Labor member in this place says it’s a lie. Go to your own government’s website. What is the $1.5 million to Israel in arms ammunition? This is the most remarkable thing. At the very least, stand up and take responsibility. At the very least, stand up and take responsibility for the death and destruction that you are complicit in.
The SPEAKER: Order! The member for Griffith will cease using the word ‘you’. I am not part of this debate. You shall direct your remarks through the chair under the standing orders.
Mr CHANDLER-MATHER: Thank you, Speaker—members of this place who are from the Labor Party, who are complicit in this genocide in Gaza. It is genuinely remarkable. There is more passion in this place from members of the Labor Party about defending their own reputation than there is in this place about the murder of 35,000 Palestinians. Let’s be real about this. You know what’s affecting social cohesion? An Australian government sending arms and weapons and ammunition, and trading in arms with a country carrying out a genocide that sees people starved to death, lose the energy to breathe and burnt alive, and mothers and fathers losing their children.