Labor has called on the Morrison government to ban right-wing organisations to send a signal that extremist views won’t be tolerated in Australia.
Currently, 25 of Australia’s 26 banned terrorist organisations are Islamist, with the other being the Kurdistan Workers’ Party, or PKK.
But Labor’s home affairs spokeswoman Kristina Keneally says these groups are not the sum total of the problem.
“The proscription of a right-wing organisation – international or domestic – would send a powerful message that these extremist views will not be tolerated,”” she wrote in an article for ASPI’s The Strategist.
Under Australia’s national security laws, before an organisation is listed the home affairs minister must be satisfied on reasonable grounds that it “is directly or indirectly engaged in preparing, planning, assisting or fostering the doing of a terrorist act, or advocates the doing of a terrorist act”.
Earlier this week, the British home secretary Priti Patel moved to outlaw the far-right terror group Feuerkrieg Division.
The group, founded in late 2018 and active across North America and Europe, advocates the use of violence and mass murder in pursuit of an apocalyptic race war.
Senator Keneally said right-wing extremism, which was once an invisible enemy, is finding new opportunities to rear its ugly head.
Read the article in the Riverine Herald.