Australia to Place First Far-Right Group on Terror List

A Britain-based neo-Nazi outfit will become the first far-right organization to be listed as a terror group in Australia, authorities said Tuesday, after growing warnings from security services.
The
Department of Home Affairs signaled that the Sonnenkrieg Division would join
the current list of 27 proscribed organizations, which have so far been
exclusively jihadist or separatist groups linked to the Middle East and central
Asia.
Australia's
domestic spy agency has repeatedly sounded the alarm about the growing threat
of far-right violence.
Since
an Australian gunman killed 51 worshippers at mosques in New Zealand's
Christchurch in 2019, the Australian Security Intelligence Organisation has
said the far-right threat had "increased" and become an
"enduring threat".
But
until now the country's conservative government has been reluctant to formally
designate any organizations as terror groups.
The
move means that being a member of the Sonnenkrieg Division or helping the
organization financially will be outlawed.
Home
affairs minister Peter Dutton said the Sonnenkrieg Division, or SKD, had
"a presence that we're particularly worried about in the UK".
"Their reach goes into the minds of young people
and Australians here," he told Nine News.
Officials
indicated the process of designating the group would be completed in the coming
days.
Extremism
experts at US-based George Washington University have described the Sonnenkrieg
Division as "tiny" and an offshoot of much larger organizations.
The
group did gain some notoriety in 2018 for suggesting Britain's Prince Harry --
whose wife is mixed race African-American -- was a "race traitor",
leading to it being banned in Britain in February 2020.
British
authorities said SKD was formed in 2018 as a splinter group of National Action,
also known as the System Resistance Network.
Australia's
opposition Labor party questioned why SKD -- which is believed to have only a
dozen members in Britain -- was listed rather than several larger and more
prominent organizations.
"They are a UK-based group that has little or no
direct links to Australia," shadow home affairs minister Kristina Keneally
said, calling for further designations.
Keneally
said the government had "sought to dismiss, downplay or ignore the threat
of right-wing extremism".
Authorities
have warned that militant far-right groups are becoming more global, with
ideologies being rapidly spread across borders via online message boards and
other digital platforms.
In
March 2020, Australia charged two men linked to the far right with attempting
to obtain military equipment and plotting a terrorist act.
According
to Australian Federal Police, "the investigation also identified alleged
social media links between one of these men and an individual in the United
Kingdom".