Jurrah granted bail
Liam Jurrah has been charged by police with multiple offences following an alleged machete attack
MELBOURNE forward Liam Jurrah has been granted bail and has been ordered to leave Alice Springs after being charged with two offences following an alleged machete attack.
Bail was set at $3000 after a prosecutor told the court Jurrah was drunk when he armed himself with a machete.
On Friday morning, superintendent Michael White said in a statement that two 23-year-old men had been charged with one count each of 'causing serious harm', 'intent to cause serious harm' and being 'armed with an offensive weapon'.
These three charges have since been rolled into two.
Jurrah was interviewed by police late Thursday following a night of unrest in Alice Springs.
He denied any involvement in a fight that broke out at a local town camp near Alice Springs.
Melbourne CEO Cameron Schwab has confirmed Jurrah has been charged by police in Central Australia after an alleged incident on Wednesday night.
Melbourne hopes to get Jurrah on a plane back to Melbourne as quickly as possible.
Jurrah returned to Yuendumu last week following the death of his partner's sister. He has since become embroiled in family issues that are believed to behind the incident on Wednesday night.
Schwab said the club was still unclear as to exactly what had transpired in the 24 hours around the alleged incident and was unable to comment specifically on the issue as the matter would be heard by the courts.
"We will try to assist and support Liam as much as we can during this period [while] understanding we are dealing with incredibly complex, emotional and difficult issues," said Schwab.
"He's always dealt with everything he has had to deal with with great maturity and we expect that he will continue to do so while dealing with this particular issue."
A club official and close friend of the 23-year-old travelled to Central Australia on Friday morning.
"I'm flying up with someone from the Melbourne Football Club … the expectation is he'll be flying home [Friday]," Bruce Hearn Mackinnon told AFL.com.au on Thursday night.
"He's got a lawyer and he's being interviewed [Thursday night]."
Hearn Mackinnon is a Deakin University lecturer and wrote Jurrah's biography. He is also one of the enigmatic forward's closest friends.
"Me and my family are kind of like his Melbourne family, so we're quite emotional about it," Hearn Mackinnon said.
"I don't know the details of the actual incident."
However, he said the incident seemed to be linked to "a long-running inter-family dispute" that had been going for 18 months.
"Two sides of Liam's family have been caught up in that," he said.
"Liam's family is engaged in warfare while he's trying to juggle a football career."
Jurrah was given personal leave from the football club on Monday to deal with - what the club said - were family and community issues at home.
Earlier on Thursday, Northern Territory police confirmed that they had attended a disturbance at Little Sisters Town Camp - on the outskirts of Alice Springs - the previous night.
"On arrival police found a 35-year-old man with serious head injuries alleged to have been inflicted by a machete," a police spokesperson said.
Alice Springs mayor Damien Ryan said there was some "anti-social behaviour in Alice Springs last night".
He told AFL.com.au that the unrest seemed to be related to a trial of a man, who was recently convicted of a murder.
He said that trial was "still causing grief for a lot of families".
Jurrah, who is recovering from off-season wrist surgery, is an elder of the Warlpiri people, who are based about 300km north-west of Alice Springs in the small indigenous community of Yuendumu.
Police have ruled out a possible link between the alleged machete attack and another incident in Alice Springs where a 15-year-old boy was found hurt in a car.