Further crackdown on Nazi symbols after 'moronic' demonstrations in Sydney

NSW Premier Chris Minns has pledged an explicit ban on public Nazi salutes if the prosecution in a test case now before the courts fails.

A large group of people wearing black clothes and face coverings walk up a set of stairs at a train station.

Passengers were evacuated from a Sydney train on 26 January following the arrival of a group of men wearing black balaclavas and brandishing Australian flags. Source: AAP / Supplied by Transport for NSW

KEY POINTS
  • NSW Premier Chris Minns has pledged "to outlaw racist Nazi ideology and white power symbols".
  • The Nazi salute is explicitly banned in some states, but the law is less clear in NSW.
  • A test case is currently before the courts, but if the prosecution fails, Minns has vowed to legislate.
Bans on Nazi symbolism will extend to white power salutes in NSW after a group of "ridiculous" racists mounted a series of demonstrations in Sydney.

Premier Chris Minns on Monday credited police for a great job but flagged legislation might need to be strengthened.

The Nazi salute , but the law is less clear in NSW.

A test case involving football fans that is before the courts is set to determine in April whether a law against Nazi symbolism extends to public salutes.

But should the prosecution case fail, the premier promised an explicit ban.
A group of police officers is seen at the North Sydney train station.
There are concerns police don't have enough legal powers against Nazis in public. Source: AAP / Brent Lewin
"I'll be looking at that case really closely," Minns told reporters on Monday.

"If that legal barrier isn't cleared, we will move legislation to outlaw racist Nazi ideology and white power symbols."

Minns also ridiculed neo-Nazis who gathered in Sydney over the weekend as "morons" and "idiots" espousing a demented ideology, warning those who travelled from interstate that the police could unmask people.

Earlier, he condemned their "obnoxious, objectionable, racist" behaviour.

"This sort of ridiculous behaviour is so out of keeping with the kind of culture that we have built up in this state," he said.
A man in awhite shirt blue suit and pink tie
Minns also ridiculed neo-Nazis who gathered in Sydney over the weekend as "morons" and "idiots". Source: AAP / Bianca De Marchi
Opposition leader Mark Speakman said the images of neo-Nazis on Sydney's streets were "incredibly confronting" and had no place in modern Australia.

He said he fully supported any legislative change to curtail the far-right while emphasising laws required enforcement to have an effect.

"What we saw, for example, on the steps of the Opera House in October was disgraceful," he said, referencing reported antisemitic chants at a snap pro-Palestinian rally.

"The problem there was not inadequate laws, but enforcement of the law."

It comes as the federal government looks to introduce new religious discrimination laws in the coming months.

The proposal would seek to protect people from hate speech and vilification based on their faith.

Laws banning people from performing the Nazi salute in public or displaying symbols such as the Nazi Hakenkreuz symbol came into effect earlier in January.

The federal laws banning Nazi salutes came after similar state prohibitions on the gesture in Tasmania and Victoria.

Passage of the legislation came following a rise in reports of antisemitism and the use of Nazi symbols by far-right groups.

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3 min read
Published 29 January 2024 6:29pm
Updated 30 January 2024 7:47am
Source: AAP


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