Australian Palestinians are preparing to rally in the country's two biggest cities demanding the Morrison government finally act against Israel for decades of "ethnic cleansing".
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A fragile ceasefire is holding in Gaza after Israel and Hamas agreed to pause 11 days of bloodshed that's so far killed about 250 Palestinians, including 66 children, and 12 Israeli civilians and a soldier.
Hundreds have also been wounded on both sides after after Israeli forces tried to forcibly evict Palestinians from their homes in the neighbourhood of Sheikh Jarrah and stormed the al-Aqsa mosque in Jerusalem.
Thousands are expected at rallies is support of Palestinians in Sydney and Melbourne on Saturday.
The Palestine Action Group's Dalia Al-Haj Qasem says the second rally in Sydney in two weeks is expected to attract at least 5000 people intent on piling pressure on the Morrison government.
"The Australian government has been complicit, since 1948 they have abstained in resolutions that support the Palestinian people, or they've come out to vote against the Palestinian people," she told AAP.
"They don't recognise any of the Human Rights Watch reports, or anything that is against Israel. We want that to change."
She says Palestinian supporters are particularly incensed by the government's position that the International Criminal Court should not investigate alleged war crimes by Israel because Australian does not consider Palestine a state.
Prime Minister Scott Morrison has urged both sides to exercise restraint, saying Israel has the right to defend itself and its people but also that Palestinians must be able to live safely.
"As a government, we believe in a two-state solution," he said earlier this month.
Earlier this week, former deputy prime minister Barnaby Joyce said the international community wouldn't be able to do anything to halt the conflict, and Australia shouldn't even try.
He said he didn't want to see any spill over of the conflict playing out in Australia.
"I don't want their problems in our streets, whether it is Catholic/Protestant, a Yugoslav issue, a Sudan issue, its on the other side of the world. We have enough problems closer to home," Mr Joyce told the ABC's Q&A program.
"If I get engrossed in Palestinian/Israeli politics, I take my mind off here.
"I don't want to see someone else's turd in my toilet and if you come to our country ... flush it."
Australian Associated Press