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‘We should be dead’: Perth’s Indigenous community felt ignored after alleged Invasion Day bombing attempt, inquiry told
File photo of a rally in Perth. Indigenous community members have testified at a federal inquiry about the alleged attempted terror attack on the Invasion Day rally. Photograph: Matt Jelonek/Getty Images View image in fullscreen File photo of a rally in Perth. Indigenous community members have testified at a federal inquiry about the alleged attempted terror attack on the Invasion Day rally. Photograph: Matt Jelonek/Getty Images ‘We should be dead’: Perth’s Indigenous community felt ignored after alleged Invasion Day bombing attempt, inquiry told Police were told of unspecified threats before the 26 January rally but did not meet with organisers until after, parliamentary inquiry into racism told Follow our Australia news live blog for latest updates Get our breaking news email , free app or daily news podcast Indigenous community members who witnessed the alleged attempted terror attack at the Invasion Day rally in Perth have told a federal inquiry into racism and hate directed at First Nations people that they felt dismissed and ignored by authorities. Western Australia police declared the incident was being investigated as a terror attack nine days after an alleged homemade bomb, filled with ball bearings, screws and other projectiles, was thrown into the crowd of 2,000 people at Forrest Place on 26 January. Perth man Liam Alexander Hall has been charged with terrorism offences and is in custody, and his lawyers have indicated he intends to plead not guilty by way of insanity . In a hearing in Perth on Monday, the Curtin University academic Renae Isaacs‑Guthridge told the inquiry that she saw the device land in front of her after it was thrown into the crowd. “I shouldn’t be sitting here and talking to you today. I and my girls, and mum and my sister, we should be dead because it landed right in front of us,” she said. Sign up for the Breaking News Australia email The Noongar‑Yamatji woman said many in the community felt ignored and dismissed in the days and weeks after the attack, which left the community shaken and traumatised. “I believe because we were an Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander crowd, there is an underlying hate against us, and so we’re not taken as seriously,” Isaacs-Guthridge said. She said the attack was not treated with the same sense of urgency or understanding as the Bondi massacre one month earlier, in which 15 people died and 40 were injured. “There needs to be consistency – no matter what happens in any situation where there’s a terrorist attack or there’s harm. And to me, that consistency was not applied,” she said. She said condemnation from politicians and other non-Indigenous leaders was lacking. “Silence. Nothing … There was obviously a distinct pattern of people who said absolutely nothing.” The Invasion Day rally organiser Fabian Yarran told the inquiry they had been warned far‑right individuals may be planning to target the event. “We had a tipoff from community members that the Nazi party was going to come