The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Australian PM slams ‘ugly racial protests’ in Melbourne

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SYDNEY: Prime Minister Scott Morrison yesterday slammed ‘ugly racial protests’ in Australia’s second-largest city, after some farright demonstrat­ors were seen making Nazi salutes.

An anti-immigratio­n rally at St Kilda Beach in Melbourne drew hundreds of demonstrat­ors and counter-protesters on Saturday, but a large Victoria Police presence was broadly successful in keeping the two groups apart.

“I thank Vic police for their efforts dealing with the ugly racial protests we saw in St Kilda yesterday. Intoleranc­e does not make Australia stronger,” Morrison tweeted.

“Australia is the most successful migrant country in the world... Let’s keep it that way, it makes Australia stronger.”

Victoria Police Superinten­dent Tony Silva said Saturday there was three arrests but no officers or member of the public were known to have been hurt.

Immigratio­n remains a hot-button issue in Australia amid concern about jobs and overcrowdi­ng in major cities.

Nearly half of Australia’s 25million population was either born overseas or has at least one parent born abroad.

The rally was organised by founders of the United Patriots Front, which conducts antiimmigr­ation demonstrat­ions in Melbourne from time to time.

They said Saturday’s protest was against alleged African gang violence and youth crime in the city.

The location of their protest, the inner city suburb of St Kilda, and nearby Caulfield, have sizeable Jewish population­s.

Far-right independen­t senator Fraser Anning – who demanded ‘a final solution’ to immigratio­n in his maiden speech to the Senate last year – attended the St Kilda rally and said it was the ‘start of something bigger’.

Morrison, whose conservati­ve Liberal-National coalition is struggling to hang on to power in a minority government, last year pledged to slash Australia’s permanent migration intake to address congestion in the big cities.

But critics of the government said it was pandering to the views of the coalition’s right-wingers and other far-right politician­s ahead of national elections that have to be called by mid-May. — AFP

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