Anti-immigration rallies labelled a ‘neo-Nazi con job’

Anti-immigration rallies across the country, which led to violent conflicts between protesters and police, were condemned by the government as a racist and neo-nazi con job.
Tens of thousands of nationalists, dozens of dogs and at least one horse on Sunday attended Australian rallies in big cities such as Sydney, Melbourne, Brisbane and Canberra on Australian flags and equipment.
The speakers and participants suffered to indicate that they were not against immigrants and asked the federal government to pause or slow down the migration rate.
However, some rhetorics have passed into racism and xenophobia, a speaker in Sydney, a theory of “an open global agenda to embarrass, defeat and change people with Anglo-Keltiic and European heritage”.
Federal Multicultural Works Minister Anne Aly said that people have legitimate concerns about migration in housing and infrastructure.
However, the protests clearly targeted immigrants from “brown people”, not the White Western countries.
ABC Radio said on Monday that “these walks are clear than the behavior observed in these walks, and that these walks are the focus of the Neo-Nazis against the anti-immigration, racist agenda to spread some legitimate concerns around the cost of housing and living,” he said.
“One of the very open calls listed there was anti -Indian immigration against people from India,” he added.
“Now, in my opinion, when you target a particular ethnic origin, it is clearly racist, this is clearly racism.”
Before the protests, the organizers claimed that 1500 immigrants entered Australia every day based on the Australian Overseas Statistical Bureau.
However, the Bureau said that the figures are not a measure of reliable migration or population change, but rather represented their self -declared traveler intentions.
Former Deputy Secretary of the Ministry of Immigration Abul Rizvi said that each other’s successive governments could not convey their immigration plans to the public and left a gap to be filled with conspiracy theories and “strange ideas”.
The workers’ government has not yet published the planning levels for the 2025/26 Migration Program labeled by Mr. Rizvi label an unprecedented delay ”.
Opposition immigrant spokesman Paul Scarr, fringe elements of the debate of immigration is important that it is important, he said.
“Last Monday in the Senate, I made a very strong speech about the aim of the aim of our Indian community, and I was horrified in some materials, and the members of our Indian community were really troublesome,” he said.
However, Senator Scarr, in the first two years of the Albanian government, “big increases” in net overseas migration “great increases” discussed the discussion “distorted” he said.
The leading Neo-Nazis made speeches at Melbourne and Sydney, where approximately 15,000 people had participated in the NSW police.
Although the crowd often acted well in Sydney, it was a different story in Melbourne, except for two men accused after being attacked during a fight in the March route of an officer, in which violence exploded between rival rallies.
Officers had to use pepper spray to break conflicts between anti-fascist and pro-fascist protesters.
Images circulating on social media showed a group of Neo-Nazis who clashed with Jewish right-wing commentator Avi oath.

Firefighter Pauline Hanson on the far right spoke hundreds of, calling for less migration and more Australian pride in a rally other than the parliament in Canberra, and welcome to the country ceremonies and a “awakening agenda” in schools.
More than 100 Canberran protesters were gathered in Commonwealth Park before people walked to the Parliamentary Building, “Go home white garbage” and “migrants here”, “Go home white garbage” and “immigrants here.
Elijah Buol, President of the Council of Ethnic Communities of Queensland, explained in depth that when the immigrant people saw themselves as the only custody of the Australian identity, they also rejected their efforts to recognize the first nations (people).

Australian Associated Press is a beating heart of Australian news. AAP has been the only independent national Newswire of Australia and has been providing reliable and fast news content to the media industry, the government and the corporate sector for 85 years. We inform Australia.


