Captain Cook’s statue toppled in Australia
MELBOURNE: Statues of British colonial figures Captain James Cook and Queen Victoria were damaged in Melbourne on Thursday, as annual Australia Day celebrations were again marked by division and protest.
On the eve of the country’s national holiday, a now-traditional row over Australia’s often brutal past re-erupted. In the southern city of Melbourne, a statue of the British explorer was felled — apparently cut off at the shins — and its plinth sprayed with the words “The colony will fall.” Meanwhile, a nearby likeness of British monarch Queen Victoria was daubed with red paint.
“This sort of vandalism has no place in our community,” said Victoria state premier Jacinta Allan. Australia Day is held every year on Jan 26.
For most Australians, it is synonymous with a day off work, a barbecue, a trip to the beach and the end of the summer holidays. But the choice of date — celebrating the arrival of European settlers at Sydney Harbour in 1788 — has become increasingly contentious.
A US-style culture war has developed, with activists demanding colonial figures be celebrated, or decrying “Invasion Day” as a celebration of cultural genocide.
Published in Dawn, January 26th, 2024