Neo-nazis and politicians among protesters at anti-immigration March for Australia rallies | Australian immigration and asylum

A Neo-Nazi was among the speakers who addressed a nervous anti-immigrant protest in Melbourne, as similar demonstrations for Banner March for Australia took place in the states and regional capitals around the country on Sunday.
The protests were condemned by the Federal Government as hate, while one Nation leader Pauline Hanson and party member Senator Malcolm Roberts and Federal MP Bob Catter participated in the Federal Deputy Bob Catter in Canberra.
The walks were encouraged by the Neo-Nazis and anti-lock figures and other eaves groups that came to the forefront during the PANDEM, but no group of responsible responsibility for organizing protests.
In Melbourne, protesters gathered with banners of the Flinders Street station and anti -immigration slogans, many of which carry Australian flags.
He met in front of the Victoria State Library, and the weekly Palestinian rally united with an antifacist against an antifacist to protest against a walk for Australia.
The Victoria police prevented the streets of Flinders and Swanston in the north of the intersection in a prominent attempt to distinguish the two rallies, but eventually met with the police barrier in the corner of the streets of Collins and Elizabeth at three places, including civil servants on horseback.
An anti -immigration protest on the feet of antifascist demonstrators and a variable verbal conflict with an open beer box flying towards the anti -immigration march on the police line.
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Antifasist demonstrators were later pushed back by the police in Riot Gear, who sprayed a dozen a dozen protesters in front of the crowd.
At the end of the rally anti-immigration rally, he reached the State Parliament, which was handled by the speakers, including Neo-Nazi Thomas Sewell, who made a speech that claims that the “men” of the protesters were walking, and iz If we do not stop migration, our death is certain ”.
Guardian, a man with a microphone that he could not define Australia said to the crowd: “Australians are tired of the rising tide of collective migration in this country”. The hymn “Albo Git” followed “Aussie Aussie Aussie ğı, where the crowd came together.
Victoria Prime Minister Jacinta Allan had previously condemned the “Walking with the Nazis ve and on Saturday night, while attending a multicultural gala on Saturday night, expressed his concerns about anti -immigration protest.
“No one who tried to divide this country has succeeded,” he said. “Because the promise of multiculturalism is much stronger.”
In Sydney New South Wales, the police chose hundreds of officers in the weekly marathon, a weekly Palestinian rally and anti -immigration march.
In Canberra, a crowd, which seems to have gathered a few hundred, shook the flags of Australia on the edge of Lake Burley Griffin with a view of the parliament house opposite the lake and wore them as cloaks.
Hanson and Roberts participated; Roberts spoke with a microphone.
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A smaller left -handed or pro -immigrant supporters kept separately by the police on a road and formed an environment to separate groups of civil servants.
Brisbane reported that the police, a few thousand festivals protesters, Roma Street Parklands and City Botanic gardens, said there were little problems because they played Redgum on a walk.
A group of protesters faced briefly faced on Roma Street. A video shows the protesters Brisbane first nations activist Uncle Wayne Wharton: in You invad this country, you stole the land. ”
Federal opposition leader, Sussan Ley, Published a video on social media Saturday evening, he says: “There is no place for violence, racism or intimidation. We cannot allow him to have hatred and fear in our social harmony, whether he was expelled or confused here.”
Federal Labor Minister Murray Watt condemned the march on Sunday morning and told Sky News: “Today we are definitely condemned to the ongoing Australian rally;
“We do not support such rallies about spreading hatred and dividing our community.”
Shadow Chief Public Prosecutor Julian Leeser warned ABC’s internal programs that he believes that he would be “goodwill that wants to change policies” on Sunday morning, but to pay attention to the company they hold.
“I have seen some materials for this protest, and I am concerned about some of the anti -Indian emotions and some of the anti -Semitic sub -shades of some of these protests,” he said.
– Additional reports by SMEE, Josh Butler and AAP




