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Tens of thousands of patriots join biggest Australia Day rallies in years – aboriginals burn flags

Australia Day rallies have attracted the biggest crowds in years, while aboriginal activists burned flags at separate far-left “invasion day” protests and demanded land seizures.

Tens of thousands joined patriotic marches in Sydney, Melbourne, Brisbane, the Gold Coast, Canberra, Perth, Adelaide and Hobart, amid a resurgence in support for holding Australia Day in January 26.

In Sydney and Melbourne multiple signs saying “Free Joel Davis” were seen in the crowd, referring to the former National Socialist Network member who has been in solitary confinement in jail for more than two months after being charged for a Telegram post and repeatedly refused bail.

In Brisbane One Nation leader Pauline Hanson made a speech where she hit out at the government’s new “hate speech” laws, and called Anthony Albanese the “worst prime minister I have ever seen”.

β€œWe can never give up our freedom of speech… I will not let them stop me. I will keep going,” she said, and criticised Labor for bringing in a record number of immigrants.

β€œYou’re (Mr Albanese) the one who created this mess, you’re the one who brought all these people into the country – 1,560 a day, that’s how many are coming in,” she said.

But at the anti-Australia Day rally in the same city two aboriginal men set the Australian flag on fire as the crowd chanted “land rights now”, while similar slogans and signs were spotted at “invasion day” protests in other cities.

In Sydney one speaker said “abolish the date, abolish the state”, and banners and signs called Australia “stolen land” and a “crime scene”.

One man was arrested after the Sydney rally after making a speech during the open mic segment at Moore Park where he allegedly said the Jewish lobby was behind the “hate speech” laws and shouted “free Joel Davis, hail White Australia, hail Thomas Sewell”.

Officers from the NSW Police Raptor Squad then followed him down the street through the inner city suburb of Surry Hills before arresting him as bystanders booed and shouted “traitors”.

Police charged the 31-year-old with “publicly incite hatred on ground of race causing fear”, and refused him bail to face court tomorrow.

Header image: Left, the crowds in Melbourne. Right, the Sydney march (supplied).

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