The Armourer

Australia to ban swastika

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Australian politician­s have capitalise­d on the outrage caused when a neo-Nazi group marched in support of an anti-trans rights rally which was being opposed by pro-trans rights supporters. The issue came to a head when 30 men from the neo-Nazi AU Nationalis­t Socialist Network marched outside Victoria’s parliament in Melbourne and repeatedly performed the Hitler salute. Immediatel­y afterwards there was a call for the salute to be legally banned in Victoria and a bill to make the salute a criminal offense was proposed by the Liberal opposition. However, a parliament­ary committee, backed by the government (Labour), rejected this in favour of introducin­g its own bill.

Which brings us to a new Federal law to be introduced, when the Attorney-General Mark Dreyfus announced that the government would criminalis­e the display of the Nazi swastika (but not the Hindu or other religious versions) and symbols for the SS, presumably meaning the SS runes. Dreyfus announced, “There is no place in Australia for symbols that glorify the horrors of the Holocaust. The Albanese government is sending the clearest possible signal to those who seek to spread hatred, violence, and anti-Semitism that we find these actions repugnant and they will not be tolerated.”

However, the details of the bill appeared more to be aimed at collectors than right wing thugs on the street, as performing the Hitler salute will not actually be banned because of difficulty defining it legally. The bill will prohibit physical and online displays of the two symbols and will make it an offense to profit from them, for example by selling a flag with the swastika on it. Despite this, and somewhat contradict­ory, private ownership of such items, those taken as war souvenirs, and those displayed in museums will not be banned. There will also be exceptions for displaying them for academic, artistic (presumably films), literary or scientific purposes. As the swastika was the official symbol of NSDAP-controlled Germany in WWII, it is on everything from posters to badges, crockery to flags. So, selling these items will be illegal, but owning them won’t be, which is almost guaranteed to drive the trade undergroun­d. ■

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