The Parliament of New South Wales passed the World Youth Day Act 2006 especially for the event. The regulations made under this act however have been the source of some controversy, mainly in the operation of various provisions of the World Youth Day Regulation 2008 within hundreds of so-called declared areas across Sydney. Of the most contentious of the regulations, a maximum fine of A$5,500 was able to be imposed for causing ‘annoyance or inconvenience’ to WYD participants. (from Wiki)

I do agree that this brings up the Freedom of Speech issue in Australia. But then, free speech is different to insulting others. Does free speech mean you are free to insult people? How about verbal harassment? Can’t really use “free speech” to justify that can you? To me, the media attention towards this controversy is an “eye-coverer”, hiding the underlying reasons for issuing this legislation in the first place. If people have respect for one another, there is no need for such a law in the first place. The law is there to re-inforce that we should all respect each other’s religious point of views.

Row over Australia’s Pope protest law
1 July 2008
(from CNN)

Story Highlights

  • Australian police get powers against anyone disrupting Pope-related event
  • Pope Benedict XVI to take part in Catholic evangelical festival later this month
  • Anyone who causes “annoyance or inconvenience to participants” faces fines
  • Lawyers, campaigners for free speech denounce the move, call it unnecessary

Australians have been warned: Don’t get caught annoying the crowds when they gather here later this month to see the pope.

Security has been heightened in Sydney for the arrival of the pope at World Youth Day later this month

Security has been heightened in Sydney for the arrival of the pope at World Youth Day later this monthNew regulations give police and emergency services workers the power to order anyone to stop behavior that “causes annoyance or inconvenience to participants in a World Youth Day event,” according to a New South Wales state government gazette. Anyone who does not comply faces a $5,300 fine.

The laws will apply in dozens of areas of downtown Sydney — including the city’s landmark opera house, train stations and city parks — that are designated venues for World Youth Day, a Catholic evangelical festival at which Pope Benedict XVI will conduct mass and lead prayer meetings when he visits.

Violators can face a fine of over $5,000 under the regulations, which critics are calling a heavy-handed blow to free speech.

Nearly 200,000 pilgrims have registered to take part in the July 15-20 World Youth Day festival, and organizers say more are expected before the event starts.

Police Commissioner Andrew Scipione said the new regulations were similar to those that police already have at sporting arenas, but were being extended to World Youth Day sites to boost security among the large crowds expected.

“These are powers to stop people taking things in… like a paint bomb,” Scipione said.

Anna Katzman, the president of the New South Wales Bar Association, which represents almost 3,000 lawyers in the state, said making someone’s inconvenience the basis of a criminal offense was “unnecessary and repugnant.”

“If I was to wear a T-shirt proclaiming that ‘World Youth Day is a waste of public money’ and refuse to remove it when an officer… asks me to, I would commit a criminal offense,” Katzman said. “How ridiculous is that?”

Lee Rhiannon, a state lawmaker with the left-leaning Greens party, said the definition of what was annoying was open to interpretation and the penalties in the new regulations were too severe.

Scipione’s deputy, Dave Owens, said officers would act reasonably when deciding what is offensive, including clothing.

“Police officers do it every day of the week,” Owens told Australian Broadcasting Corp. radio. “We’re not the fashion police, we’re not killjoys.”

State Premier Morris Iemma, whose government is paying part of the costs of World Youth Day, defended the regulations, saying they would not be used to put down dissent.

“People have the right to protest; they can do so … peacefully and lawfully,” Iemma said.

The pope will arrive July 12 and spend more than a week in Sydney, first taking a break and then leading a series of prayer gatherings and meetings with Prime Minister Kevin Rudd and other officials at a cathedral and other venues downtown. He will also take a boat trip on Sydney Harbor.

The event will be capped by a papal mass at a racetrack in the city on July 20.

Parts of Sydney will be shut down for World Youth Day events, including a re-enactment of the 12 stations of the cross in various parts of the city, a walking pilgrimage by tens of thousands of participants across the Sydney Harbor Bridge and a papal motorcade through the city.

World Youth Day spokesman Father Mark Podesta said the church had not sought the increased powers for police during the event.