Beyond the Breaking News

Australian Appeals Court Reserves Decision on Genocide Case Against King Charles III

World News News

Australian Appeals Court Reserves Decision on Genocide Case Against King Charles III
King Charles IIIGenocide CaseAustralian Appeals Court

Three Australian appeals court judges have reserved their decision on whether an activist can prosecute Britain's King Charles III for alleged genocide of Australia's Indigenous people.

Uncle Robbie Thorpe speaks outside the Victoria state Supreme Court of Appeal in Melbourne, Australia on June 3. MELBOURNE, Australia — Three Australian appeals court judges reserved their decision Wednesday on whether an activist can prosecute Britain's King Charles III for alleged genocide of Australia's Indigenous people.

Uncle Robbie Thorpe, 68, turned to the Supreme Court of Appeal in Victoria state after two lower courts rejected his bid to launch a private prosecution against the king in the Melbourne Magistrates' Court. Indigenous Australians use the titles uncle and aunt as marks of respect for community elders.

His case alleges the monarch, who is also Australia's head of state, the Australian government and its institutions were perpetuating a genocide of Indigenous people by maintaining systemic disadvantages on multiple socioeconomic levels, making them the most underprivileged minority in the country. Indigenous Australians account for four per cent of the population. They die younger than other Australians, suffer worse health problems, and are more likely to be imprisoned and unemployed than other groups, according to official statistics.

Thorpe told The Associated Press if he exhausts his legal options in Australia, he would take the offence under the Genocide Convention to the International Criminal Court in the Netherlands.

"It's clear that they're unwilling, unable, reluctant to deal with these international legal issues like genocide," Thorpe told the AP before the hearing, referring to the Australian judiciary. He later told the judges Indigenous people were dying because their disadvantage in Australia was compounding.

"The Crown is responsible for all this mess," Thorpe said. "Australia's got away with genocide of Aboriginal people since they arrived here. " The British colonised Australia in 1788 and violently seized Indigenous people's land without a treaty. "They totally failed to prevent .

That's the crime here. They failed to prevent genocide knowingly and they failed to punish anyone for it," he added. The British punished Indigenous people for speaking their language and for practicing their cultures in a bid to make them Christian and Western. Generations of children were taken from Indigenous families in now-discredited assimilation policies.

Thorpe wore a traditional possum-skin coat in court and carried a feather from an Australian wedge-tailed eagle, an Indigenous totem. Justice Karin Emerton, the court's presiding judge, referred to him as Uncle Robbie. Thorpe is attempting to charge the king under Indigenous law that has existed for more than 65,000 years, state common law and federal criminal law, court documents show.

In dismissing Thorpe's appeal last year, a judge ruled that a magistrate was not allowed to consider Indigenous law and genocide was not an offence under common law. The federal attorney-general would have to sign off on any genocide prosecution under federal law, the judge ruled. Following a two-hour hearing on Wednesday, Emerton said the three judges would deliver their verdict at a later date.

If Thorpe loses, his final option would be Australia's High Court before attempting to have the king prosecuted in The Hague.

We have summarized this news so that you can read it quickly. If you are interested in the news, you can read the full text here. Read more:

asiaonecom /  🏆 10. in SG

King Charles III Genocide Case Australian Appeals Court Indigenous Australians Uncle Robbie Thorpe

 

United States Latest News, United States Headlines

Similar News:You can also read news stories similar to this one that we have collected from other news sources.

Iraqi National Accused of Plotting European Attacks Pleads Not Guilty in Manhattan CourtIraqi National Accused of Plotting European Attacks Pleads Not Guilty in Manhattan CourtAn Iraqi national accused of plotting at least 18 attacks in Europe in retaliation for the US and Israel's war with Iran pleaded not guilty in Manhattan federal court, calling himself a "prisoner of war" and claiming children and women were being killed by US rockets. He is charged with conspiring to provide material support to Iran-backed militant groups Kata'ib Hizballah and the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, both designated as foreign terrorist organizations by the US. The defendant, Mohammad Baqer Saad Dawood Al-Saadi, was persuaded to sit down after speaking out. His lawyer stated he worked for the Iraqi government and was held in solitary confinement in Brooklyn, seeking communication with Iraqi diplomatic counsel and family.
Read more »

King Charles Shares Deep Affection for Balmoral in New Guidebook ForewordKing Charles Shares Deep Affection for Balmoral in New Guidebook ForewordIn the foreword to a new guidebook on Balmoral, King Charles reveals why Queen Elizabeth II chose the Scottish estate for her final days and expresses his own lifelong love for the 'sacred' property, now opening more of its grounds to the public.
Read more »

Australian Man Vandalizes Danang Cafe, Causes Over 500 Million Dong in DamagesAustralian Man Vandalizes Danang Cafe, Causes Over 500 Million Dong in DamagesAn Australian tourist went on a destructive rampage at a cafe in Danang, Vietnam, smashing equipment and furniture, leading to his detention. The incident resulted in significant financial losses and a temporary closure for the business.
Read more »

Former Thai prime minister Thaksin to be freed after royal pardonFormer Thai prime minister Thaksin to be freed after royal pardonKing Maha Vajiralongkorn granted pardons to selected prisoners to mark Queen Suthida's birthday on Jun 3, the official royal gazette stated.
Read more »



Render Time: 2026-06-11 12:21:53