Australia news live: South African’s visa cancelled after neo-Nazi rally outside NSW parliament | Australia news

South African man’s visa cancelled after neo-Nazi rally outside NSW parliament

Tom McIlroy

The home affairs minister, Tony Burke, has cancelled the visa of Matthew Gruter after a recent neo-Nazi publicity stunt outside the New South Wales state parliament.

A South African national, Gruter, who has been living in Australia with his wife, was part of the group who posed with an anti-Jewish lobby banner and posted content to social media earlier this month.

Officials in the home affairs department were preparing advice for Burke at the weekend, developments first reported by the Sydney Morning Herald on Sunday.

“If you are on a visa you are a guest. If you’re a citizen you’re a full member of the Australian family,” Burke said on Monday.

Like with any household, if a guest turns up to show hatred and wreck the household, they can be told it’s time to go home.

His visa was cancelled on Monday.

Last week’s demonstration – which lasted less than 20 minutes in total – was observed by NSW police. The protest was authorised: the group had filled out a “form 1”, a notice of intention to hold a public assembly, which had not been opposed by police.

More than 60 members of the group carried a large banner that read “Abolish the Jewish Lobby” earlier this month.

Demonstrators wore black uniforms, some with insignia stitched on to their jackets. Some obscured their faces with hats and sunglasses, but many appeared unworried about being filmed and identified.

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Man who lit Melbourne synagogue fire was having schizophrenic hallucinations, court told

A man who admitted setting the doors of a synagogue on fire was having hallucinations about zombies, a court has been told.

Angelo Loras, 35, on Monday pleaded guilty to recklessly endangering members of the East Melbourne Hebrew Congregation by setting fire to their synagogue on 5 July.

Loras was arrested the next day and told police he believed the building was a home rather than a place of worship.

Magistrate Malcolm Thomas on Monday accepted Loras had been diagnosed with schizophrenia and he did not intentionally target the synagogue.

The magistrate noted Loras’s schizophrenia symptoms had significantly improved in the past four months as he was receiving medication and treatment while on remand.

– AAP

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