Australian nationalists have held a protest outside the Department of Home Affairs in Melbourne demanding the deportation of violent African immigrants.
The group of about 30 members of the National Socialist Network (NSN) led by prominent activist Joel Davis gathered on the steps of the government building in Docklands just after midday on Sunday with a banner reading “solve black crime, send them back”.
Footage of the protest obtained by Noticer News shows Mr Davis making a speech and ending with “the time has come to send them back to where they belong” before leading chants of “Australia for the White man, the rest must go” and “blood and honour”.
Nationalist activist Joel Davis made a speech during a National Socialist Network protest against African crime outside the Department of Home Affairs building in Melbourne today demanding the deportation of foreign criminals.
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The National Socialist Network are protesting African crime with a banner saying “solve black crime, send them back” outside of the Department of Home Affairs in Melbourne.
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Another clip shows the the black-clad protesters, who were all wearing masks except Mr Davis, holding the banner in front of the entrance to the office, where “refugee” demonstrators demanding to be allowed to stay in Australia forever camped out for months last year.
“The reason why we are here at the Department of Home Affairs is to demand deportation of racial foreigner criminals from our nation,” Mr Davis said in his speech.
“Deportation is less than they deserve, but nevertheless, we demand it. The importation of foreigners by the suicidal pathological doctrine of diversity and multiculturalism is incompatible with the peaceful and civilised White Australian way of life.”
Mr Davis told Noticer News his group wanted to highlight the government’s unwillingness to remove immigrant criminals from Australia, resulting in an African gang crisis that has led to Victoria banning machetes.
“Tony Burke and his Department of Home Affairs are responsible for the African crime wave sweeping Melbourne, due to their failure to deport violent offenders,” he said.
The protest comes two weeks after the NSN staged a similar demonstration outside Northland Shopping Centre in Preston with a banner saying “ban n*ggers, not machetes” following an alleged African gang fight in front of horrified shoppers a week earlier.

Premier Jacinta Allan fast-tracked the state’s machete sale ban after the shocking Northland incident, but since then Melbourne has been rocked by a series of alleged machete incidents involving Africans, including one at a McDonald’s in Truganina, and another at a Dan Murphy’s in Fawkner.
Machetes were also wielded in an alleged clash between teenagers at Caroline Springs Shopping Centre, and an alleged attack at a service Station in Doreen since the sale ban was brought in.
Mr Burke, nicknamed “Tony Burka” by critics for his pro-Muslim and pro-Palestinian refugee policies, has been at the centre of controversy since being appointed immigration minister last year.
He has come under fire for failing to prevent hundreds of immigrant criminals spared deportation by his predecessor from committing more crimes, holding a pre-election citizenship blitz in multicultural suburbs, creating a pathway to permanent residency for Palestinians, and for owning six properties, the equal second-most of any politician, during a migration-fuelled housing crisis.
Last year a group of so-called refugees held an ongoing protest outside the Docklands building that led to complaints from locals about noise and traffic disruption, and led to violent scuffles with police.
During those rallies the NSN held two counterprotests in August and October with a banner saying “fuck off, we’re full”, and were pepper-sprayed and attacked with batons by police during the second rally.
Header image: Protesters outside the Department of Home Affairs (supplied).