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AAP
AAP
Politics
Tom Wark

MPs urge top cop to green-light Herzog visit protest

Demonstrators have vowed to defy protest restrictions when the Israeli president visits Sydney. (Callum Godde/AAP PHOTOS)

Police should not stand in the way of a march to parliament protesting Israeli President Isaac Herzog's visit despite being granted increased powers, say more than a dozen MPs.

Thousands of Palestine Action Group protesters plan to take to central Sydney's streets to oppose the visit but police have vowed to crack down on unauthorised action.

The NSW government has approved special event public safety arrangements to bolster the number of police deployed during Mr Herzog's visit, which begins on Monday.

Police Commissioner Mal Lanyon said thousands of officers would be on hand to ensure calm across the city during Mr Herzog's stay.

NSW Police Commissioner Mal Lanyon
Police Commissioner Mal Lanyon says the proposed rally and march route has not been authorised. (Minns Protest Presser/AAP PHOTOS)

"The Palestinian Action Group proposes a rally from Town Hall through the streets of the Sydney CBD," he told reporters on Saturday.

"That route is unauthorised."

But a group of 13 MPs, including four members of the Minns government, have written to Mr Lanyon urging him to allow the march to proceed.

"It is time for cool heads to prevail ... the role of state government is to ensure community safety," Labor backbencher and signatory to the letter Stephen Lawrence said.

"A safe, peaceful procession to parliament is achievable I believe and I call on police to truly and constructively engage with the organisers."

Rallies have been organised in all state capitals ahead of Mr Herzog's five-day tour, with Sydney his first stop.

Protesters and human rights experts have called for his invitation to be rescinded, citing his culpability in Israel's bombardment and starvation of Palestinians in Gaza.

Mr Herzog has defended his tour, saying his visit is important to the Australian Jewish community reeling from the Bondi Beach terror attack.

"I want my visit to be a visit of goodwill," he told Nine newspapers.

The president suggested the motivations of the protesters expected to meet his arrival on Monday were hypocritical.

"I say to all those who kept on demonstrating and will demonstrate, 'where are you when tens of thousands of Iranian citizens are butchered?'" he said, citing the bloody 2026 crackdown on nationwide protests by Tehran.

Mr Herzog's arrival in Sydney has been formally declared a major event to help manage crowd safety.

NSW Premier Chris Minns said the arrangements were not a ban on protests or marches and people retained the right to lawfully express views.

However, any risk of conflict, violence or public disorder would not be tolerated.

Chris Minns
Premier Chris Minns says people retain the right to express their views lawfully. (Dominic Giannini/AAP PHOTOS)

"We cannot allow a situation where mourners and protesters come into close contact on city streets without strong police presence," Mr Minns told reporters on Saturday.

"This is about keeping people safe, lowering the temperature and ensuring Sydney remains calm and orderly."

Anyone who fails to comply with lawful police directions could face penalties, including fines of up to $5500 or exclusion from the major event area.

Asked whether increasing police powers to crack down on protesters could inflame tensions, Mr Minns said the measures were designed to prevent violence.

"During ... 200 (previous) Palestinian Action Group protests, several people have been detained and arrested by NSW Police who were counter-demonstrators," he said.

"That's not because the NSW Police are picking one side or another but they were fearful of a clash - in this case, a clash against protesters."

Sydney Jewish groups will receive another $1 million in support funding in the aftermath of the Bondi attack, the NSW government announced on Saturday.

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