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Australia

Brawls erupt as protesters clash at immigration rallies

31 August 2025 16:55 | News

As thousands of nationalist mass migration went to the streets that wanted to stop, anti -immigration and opposite protesters clashed in Australia.

March for the Australian fans, March, Australian flags wore the flags and the rallies between the neo-Nazis and right-wing politicians shouted openly loaded slogans.

The crowds across the country were mostly violent, but the police had to use pepper spray to separate some professional and anti -immigration protesters.

Protesters and speakers insisted that they were not against immigrants, but they wanted to decrease the number of migrations such as “love or go” and “Aussie, Aussie, Oi, Oi, Oi”.

A nation leader Pauline Hanson received a Rockstar welcome in the country’s capital, where hundreds of people gathered in Commonwealth Park and walked through a bridge to the Parliament Building.

FireBrand Queensrender said to the crowd, “If you don’t like it, I will be the first person to take you to the airport and put you on a plane.”

A man of the crowd heard that he was kissing his cheek by Senator Hanson when he wanted his little flag.

A nation senator Malcolm Roberts also addressed the ACT crowd containing a man on horseback, saying that mass migration is “feeling the death of Australian identity”.

A nation leader Pauline Hanson was praised by anti -immigrant protesters in Canberra. (Dominic Giannini/AAP Photos)

The crowds gathered before the march, “Nazis closed, F *** closed”, “Ev White garbage” and “immigrants welcome here,” he shouted.

After the officers had to fight in Canberra, an anti-fascism protester walked by the police.

The man broke the rankings to join the anti -immigration side and was put on a head lock by a man who spilled on the Australian flag.

The police were forced to separate the protesters by pepper spray in Melbourne, because the Riot team was deployed to manage the conflicts.

Thomas Sewell
Neo-Nazi Thomas Sewell spoke at a rally against Australia for Australia in Melbourne. (Joel Carrett/AAP Photos)

Neo-Nazi Thomas Sewell addressed the male crowd, mostly counted as thousands of people.

Before walking in the town, they gathered the outside of the Flinders Street station.

A series of young men in uniform black jackets and trousers stood together, one of them wore a shirt marked with the words “F *** Off Full”.

Victoria Police Police Minister Anthony Carbins described anti -immigration marches as “filthy and hateful ve and warned that people who broke the law would be handled by the authorities.

Thousands of more people participated in a rally running next to a pro -Palestin protest and the annual marathon of the city.

NSW Liberter Deputy John Ruddick called for a five-year immigration moraper, while another speaker said that “embarrassing, defeating and changing people with Anglo-Celtic and European heritage”.

Protest
Protesters clashed in Melbourne, where some friction between the two groups broke out. (Joel Carrett/AAP Photos)

The police detained a woman who exploited a pro -Palestinian crowd and prevented her from joining the Hyde Park show.

The NSW police said that there was a arrest to violate peace, but no accusation was made.

The crowds also gathered in Brisbane and Townsville, where the Australian party deputies of the Regade deputy Bob Katter and the State Catter Robbie Katiter and Nick Dametto joined the march.

Before the rallies, political leaders were calm and excited violence and racism had no place in Australia.

March for the anti -Australian immigration rally in Sydney
Politicians called on to be calm in front of the protests, saying that there was no place for racism in Australia. (Dean Lewins/AAP Photos)

Cabinet Minister Murray Watt said that he was “absolutely condemned” the anti -immigrant rallies.

“The organizing and promotion of this by Neo-Nazi groups tells us everything we need to know about the hate and division of division about such rallies,” he said.

Liberal Senator James Paterson, who has long been defending the laws of solid migration, warned that many Australians have received sincere views on the issue, but the Neo-Nazis would have at rallies.

He said he was worried about the aim of targeting multicultural communities, including Indian Australians, shameful and misleading.

The opposition leader Sussan Ley called on people not to allow hatred and fear in the social harmony of the country.


AAP News

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.

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