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    Home»News»Neo-Nazis and politicians among protesters at anti-immigration March for Australia rallies | Australian immigration and asylum
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    Neo-Nazis and politicians among protesters at anti-immigration March for Australia rallies | Australian immigration and asylum

    By August 31, 2025No Comments5 Mins Read
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    Neo-Nazis and politicians among protesters at anti-immigration March for Australia rallies | Australian immigration and asylum
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    A neo-Nazi was among speakers to address the crowd at a tense anti-immigration protest in Melbourne, as similar demonstrations under the banner March for Australia took place in state and territory capitals across the country on Sunday.

    While the protests were condemned as hateful by the federal government, some politicians attended, including the One Nation leader, Pauline Hanson, and party member Senator Malcolm Roberts in Canberra and the federal MP Bob Katter in Townsville.

    The marches were promoted by neo-Nazis, as well as anti-lockdown figures who gained prominence during the pandemic, and other fringe groups but no group publicly claimed responsibility for organising the protests.

    In Melbourne protesters gathered outside Flinders Street station with many carrying Australian flags, along with placards bearing anti-immigration slogans.

    A counter-protest also assembled in front of the State Library of Victoria, with the weekly pro-Palestine rally merging with an antifascist counter-demonstration to protest against the March for Australia.

    The March for Australia anti-immigration rally in Melbourne on Sunday. Photograph: Joel Carrett/AAP

    Victoria police blocked off Flinders and Swanston streets to the north of the intersection, in an apparent attempt to keep two rallies apart, but they eventually met at the corner of Collins and Elizabeth streets with a barrier of police between them, three rows deep, including officers on horseback.

    A volatile verbal confrontation ensued, with a bottle thrown from the anti-immigration protest smashing at the feet of the antifascist demonstrators, and an open can of beer flying over the police line towards the anti-immigration march.

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    The antifascist demonstrators were then pushed back by police in riot gear, who pepper-sprayed approximately a dozen protesters at the front of the crowd.

    The anti-immigration rally eventually reached state parliament, where protesters were addressed by speakers, including the neo-Nazi Thomas Sewell, who gave a speech claiming “his men” had led the march, and saying: “If we do not stop immigration, then our death is certain.”

    Neo-Nazi Thomas Sewell speaks to protesters. Photograph: Joel Carrett/AAP

    A man with a microphone whom Guardian Australia could not identify told the crowd: “Australians are sick and tired of the rising tide of mass immigration in this country”. He led a chant of “Albo must go”, followed by “Aussie Aussie Aussie”, which the crowd bellowed in unison.

    The Victorian premier, Jacinta Allan, had earlier condemned those who “walk with Nazis” and expressed concern about the anti-immigration protest while attending a multicultural gala on Saturday night.

    “No one who has ever tried to divide this country has ever succeeded,” she said. “Because the promise of multiculturalism is so much stronger.”

    In Sydney New South Wales police deployed hundreds of officers at the annual marathon, a weekly pro-Palestine rally and the anti-immigration march, all in different parts of the city.

    The March for Australia rally in Sydney. Photograph: Dean Lewins/AAP

    In Canberra a crowd of what appeared to be a few hundred gathered and chanted on the edge of Lake Burley Griffin with a view of Parliament House across the lake, waving Australian flags and wearing them as capes.

    Hanson and Roberts were in attendance;Roberts was seen speaking with a microphone.

    One Nation leader Pauline Hanson at the March for Australia rally in Canberra. Photograph: Mick Tsikas/EPA

    A smaller counter-rally of leftwing or pro-immigrant supporters kept separate across a road by police, with officers forming a perimeter to keep the groups apart.

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    In Brisbane police reported little trouble as a group of a few thousand flag-draped protesters played Redgum on the march between the Roma Street parklands and the city botanical gardens.

    Protesters at the Brisbane rally. Photograph: Jono Searle/EPA

    They were confronted briefly at Roma Street by a group of a counter-protesters. One video shows Uncle Wayne Wharton, a Brisbane First Nations activist, telling protesters: “You invaded this country, you stole the land.”

    Some protesters in both Brisbane and Adelaide were seen expressing solidarity with alleged Porepunkah police killer Dezi Freeman.

    In Brisbane a woman repeatedly yelled “I stand with Dezi” as police walked by. She was holding a sign that said “I identify as sovereign”.

    A man holds a placard with an image of fugitive Dezi Freeman as anti-immigration protesters march in Adelaide on Sunday. Photograph: Tracey Nearmy/Getty Images

    In Adelaide a man held a placard with an image of the fugitive at the march from Rundle Park.

    It came after Freeman’s wife, Amalia Freeman, released a statement on Sunday pleading with her husband to surrender to police and expressing “deep sorrow” over the fatal shooting of two officers on Tuesday.

    Ahead of the March for Australia rallies, federal opposition leader, Sussan Ley, released a video on social media on Saturday evening saying: “There is no place for violence, racism or intimidation. Whether incited from afar or stirred up here, we cannot let hatred and fear tear at our social cohesion.”

    The federal Labor minister Murray Watt denounced the march on Sunday morning, telling Sky News: “We absolutely condemn the March for Australia rally that’s going on today; it’s not about increasing social harmony.

    “We don’t support rallies like this that are about spreading hate and that are about dividing our community.”

    The shadow attorney general, Julian Leeser, told the ABC’s Insiders program on Sunday morning that he believed there would be people there “of goodwill who want to change policies” but warned them to be careful of the company they keep.

    “I’ve seen some of the material for that particular protest and I’m really concerned about the anti-Indian sentiment that is being expressed and some of the antisemitic undertones of some of those protests,” he said.

    – additional reporting by Andrew Messenger, Ben Smee, Josh Butler and AAP

    among antiimmigration asylum Australia Australian immigration march NeoNazis Politicians protesters rallies
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