This article is more than 1 year old

This article is more than 1 year old

Four journalists working for the public television network France 2 have been charged with trespassing for filming a protest near the Abbot Point coal terminal, in north Queensland, targeting the operations of the Adani group.

The group of journalists includes Hugo Clément, a reporter well known in France for his documentaries about climate change and environmental issues.

Facebook Twitter Pinterest Journalist Hugo Clément and a crew from the France 2 television network were arrested. Photograph: Eric Fougere - Corbis/Getty Images

Clément and a crew were arrested while filming anti-coal activists from the group Frontline Action on Coal, which early on Monday morning set up a blockade outside the Abbot Point port. About 20 members of the environmental group gathered outside the port entrance from 7am. Two locked themselves to a concrete barrel on the roadway.

In a statement Frontline Action on Coal said Clément and others were told by police they were “obstructing the railway” while filming the protests.

“Without warning, all four Frenchmen were immediately placed in handcuffs and put into police vehicles,” the statement said.

The group was taken to a police station in the nearby town of Bowen. They were released on bail on Monday afternoon and ordered to face the local magistrates court in September.

Clément said he spent several hours in a cell after being arrested while filming a protest, which included two demonstrators locking their hands inside a concrete barrel.

“We were just filming the action at the blockade of the highway and police came straight to us and arrested us without a word, without saying anything,” Clément said.

“They took us into a cell for seven hours.”

He said he and his crew, who work for French public broadcaster France 2, were charged with trespassing and released on conditional bail, which included that they not go within 20km of the Carmichael site.

“We didn’t understand why they arrested us because we weren’t doing anything wrong, we were just doing our jobs by filming the action,” he said.

“I had a good picture of Australia ... this is not a very democratic thing to say to a film crew, to say you cannot go there.”

In a statement, Queensland police confirmed they arrested seven people, including three French nationals who were charged with one count of “trespassing on a railway”.

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“The Queensland police service supports lawful and peaceful protest and is committed to working with groups to plan and facilitate lawful activities,” police said in a statement.

Protestors from several anti-coal groups have visibly increased their activity in recent weeks, since Adani cleared environmental regulatory hurdles that allowed the company to begin construction of the Carmichael coalmine.

Monday’s protests were timed to coincide with the start of significant land-clearing near the Carmichael mine site. In Brisbane members of a separate group, Galilee Blockade, blocked access to the headquarters of a concrete pumping company that has worked for Adani.

The actions follow weeks of regular and escalating protests that have delayed traffic in the Brisbane central business district.

The opposition Liberal National party in Queensland has responded by calling for the introduction of “industrial sabotage” laws that partly seek to hold organised groups liable for the protest actions of individual members.

“Enough is enough, we need to come down tough on these people,” the Queensland opposition leader, Deb Frecklington, told reporters on Monday. “Everyone has a right to protest, but no one has a right to intimidate and threaten people’s jobs.”