Australian nazis in court over Anzac Day disruption

Three members of Australia’s neo-Nazi National Socialist Network (NSN) are to contest charges arising from their disruption of a dawn Anzac Day memorial service in Melbourne last April. Jacob Hersant, Nathan Bull, and Michael Nelson appeared in court this week and entered not guilty pleas to offences including behaving in an offensive manner in a…

Jacob Hersant ordered out of Anzac ceremony
Jacob Hersant ordered out of Anzac ceremony

Three members of Australia’s neo-Nazi National Socialist Network (NSN) are to contest charges arising from their disruption of a dawn Anzac Day memorial service in Melbourne last April.

Jacob Hersant, Nathan Bull, and Michael Nelson appeared in court this week and entered not guilty pleas to offences including behaving in an offensive manner in a public place and taking part in a disturbance within the Shrine of Remembrance reserve.

Commemoration

The disruption occurred on 25 April last year, when the group heckled and booed during a ‘Welcome to Country’ ceremony at Melbourne’s Shrine of Remembrance, as hundreds of thousands gathered nationally to commemorate Australia’s war dead.

The protesters were heard shouting slogans including “this is our country” and “we don’t have to be welcomed.”

Jacob hersant and nathan Bull at Anzac ceremony
Jacob Hersant shouting during the ceremony. Nathan Bull is behind him

Welcome to Country is a formal ceremony where an Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander elder, or a recognised representative of the traditional custodians of the land where an event is taking place, formally welcomes attendees to their country.

It is standard at major public events and official ceremonies including Anzac Day services, but has become a flashpoint for the Australian far right, who regard it as historically illegitimate.

Low cowardice

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese condemned the disruption as “an act of low cowardice on a day when we honour courage and sacrifice,” and called for those responsible to face the full force of the law.

Opposition leader Peter Dutton also condemned the booing, saying Welcome to Country was an important part of official ceremonies that deserved respect.

Jacob Hersant at Anzac ceremony
Jacob Hersant defends disrupting Anzac ceremony

Hersant is the most prominent of the three defendants. He co-founded the NSN in 2020 alongside Thomas Sewell, building it from earlier far-right cells including the Lads Society and Antipodean Resistance, using provocative public demonstrations, Nazi salutes, and high-visibility stunts to attract attention and recruit members.

British nazi links

As Searchlight has previously reported, the NSN developed close ties with British far-right figures, with Sewell appearing multiple times on Mark Collett’s online Patriotic Weekly Review, and NSN cited as an inspiration by the performative nazis of White Vanguard.

Tomas Sewell interviewed by mark Collett
NSN leader Thomas Sewell interviewed by mark Collett

Hersant became the first person charged under new Victorian anti-Nazi laws after performing a Hitler salute on the steps of a Melbourne court.

A County Court judge upheld the conviction on appeal in November, ruling that Hersant had deliberately performed the salute and that it did not constitute protected political expression.

He was sentenced to one month in jail last month.

Violent peak

The NSN’s hostility towards Indigenous Australians reached a violent peak in August 2025, after an anti-immigration rally in Melbourne where Sewell was the principal speaker.

A group of around 30 to 50 black-clad NSN members broke away and stormed Camp Sovereignty, a First Nations protest camp and sacred burial ground in Kings Domain park.

Thomas Sewell leads attack on Indigenous People's camp in Melbourne
Thomas Sewell leads attack on Indigenous People’s camp in Melbourne

Attackers tore down First Nations flags, trampled the camp’s sacred fire and assaulted men, women, and children indiscriminately, chanting “white power” and racial slurs as they did so.

Sewell was pictured personally leading the charge, telling his followers “let’s get ’em” as they surged into the camp. Four people were injured, two of them hospitalised with severe head wounds.

Dozens of offences

Sewell was subsequently charged with dozens of offences including violent disorder, affray, assault, and discharging a missile. He appeared on Collett’s PWR shortly after being released from custody following the attack, with Collett framing his detention as imprisonment in “the Australian gulag.”

The Anzac Day prosecution adds to a lengthening legal record for the group. On Australia Day 2025, around 40 NSN members marched through Adelaide chanting white supremacist slogans, resulting in 16 arrests on charges including displaying Nazi symbols.

Wind up activity

In January 2026, facing the prospect of new federal hate speech legislation that could criminalise the organisation and its recruitment methods, the NSN announced it would wind up all activity, describing the move as an attempt to limit legal exposure rather than an ideological retreat.

That disbandment is unlikely to affect the trio’s forthcoming trial. A trial date will be set in due course.


Peter Hain

Peter Hain, founder of the ANL and friend of Searchlight

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Lord Alf Dubs

Searchlight’s voice is more important than ever, and I am delighted that it will now be available to a wider audience than ever before in its new incarnation online. Searchlight has been extremely helpful over the years in exposing the far right, corruption, criminality and the murky links between organised crime and powerful interests in the UK and abroad. I wish Searchlight the very best.

Alf Dubs
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Professor Colin Holmes
University of Sheffield

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Paul Holborow

Paul Holborow

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Founding member of the ANL and National Organiser 1977-81

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Nick Davies

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