Far-right threat exposed by anti-immigration rallies

Australia was invited to take the threat of extreme right excess after walking with the Neo-Nazis in anti-immigration rallies.
Tens of thousands of people attended Australian rallies in big cities such as Sydney, Melbourne, Adelaide, Brisbane and Canberra on Sunday, at least one horse that spilled into dozens of dogs and Australian flags and their equipment.
Although the protests were condemned as racist and condemned as “Neo-Nazi Con, politicians such as Bob Catter and One Nation Senator Pauline Hanson spoke in some cases.
Prime Minister Anthony Arnavut, “Diversity a power in modern Australia” continued.
“(CT) gives us an incredible economic opportunity because of our connections with the diaspora and every country on the planet,” he told Parliament on Monday.
However, the Greens accused the members of both big parties of laying their ideological roads on the weekend rallies.
“Workers and liberals have punched immigrants and refugees for years,” Greens Deputy Mehreen Faruqi said to the Senate.
“I hope this is a call for a wake up for all of you to change the course and do something about the extreme right excess that you ignore.”
The senators of the small party pointed out to a Labor Law that would allow hundreds of former immigrant prisoners to be deported to Nauru and said that the coalition would support.
The well-known Neo-Nazis made speeches at Melbourne and Sydney, where NSW police estimated that 15,000 people participated.
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.
But in Sydney, a speaker sprouted a theory about “an open global agenda to embarrass, defeat and change people with Anglo-Centic and European Heritage”.
Multicultural Minister of Affairs Anne Aly said that people have legitimate concerns about the strains that migration placed in housing and infrastructure.
Protests, not white Western countries, but “brown people from countries” immigrants clearly targeting, he said.
Monday, he said on Monday that “these walks are very clear from the observed behavior.
“One of the very open calls listed there was anti -Indian immigration.
“Now, in my opinion, it is clearly racist when you target a certain ethnic origin.”
Opposition leader Sussan Ley claimed that the weekend rallies were ğı joined by well-intentioned people, but avoiding hatred by Neo-Nazis ”.
“This is never acceptable,” he said.
There was some diversity in the coalition, Senator Jacinta Nampijinpa price congratulated those who walked.

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 instead represents 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 crowd usually acted well in Sydney, but two men accused of being attacked during a fight in a bar of an officer’s March route.
In Melbourne, it was a different story in which violence exploded between anti-immigrant hikers and anti-fascist and pro-Fascist protesters.
More than 100 Canberran protest against “F ** K Nazis Off, F ** K off”, “White Garbage” and “immigrants are welcomed here”.

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.

