Neo-Nazi leader Thomas Sewell in custody as deportation calls mount

Neo-Nazi leader Thomas Sewell in custody as deportation calls mount

Independent Australia
08 Sep 2025, 11:30 GMT+

Calls grow for neo-Nazi Thomas Sewells deportation, but strict citizenship laws make removal unlikely. DrAbul Rizvireports.

AFTER HIS PARTICIPATION in the anti-immigration marches and attack on an Indigenous protest site in Melbourne, apetitioncalling forNational Socialist NetworkleaderThomas Sewells deportation has reportedly secured over 100,000 signatures.Peter Van Onselen, writing for theDaily Mail, has expressed disbelief at Home Affairs MinisterTony Burkes explanation that the current law doesnt allow for the deportation of neo-Nazis.

Sewell is currently in custody, facing a variety of charges relating to his violent actions. These may or may not lead to a gaol sentence of 12 months or more. We shall have to wait and see.

Sewell was reportedly born in New Zealand and migrated to Australia at a very early age, and has spent most of his life in Australia. If he has not taken out Australian citizenship, then the Character provisions of theMigration Actcould be used to cancel his visa based on the gaol sentence or because he represents a risk to public safety in Australia (but not based on his political beliefs). He could then be deported to NZ, although that would need to be negotiated with NZ.

Neo-nazis turn anti-immigration marches into a showcase for violence

Australias Far-Righthijacked the August 31 rallies nationwide, using them as displays of intimidation.

Most media reports suggest he is a dual NZ/Australian citizen. That makes his deportation much more difficult unless he lied on his application for Australian citizenship. There is no publicly available evidence that he did so.

If he did not lie on his citizenship application form, then the rules around cancellation of his citizenship are very strict. Section 36D of theCitizenship Actallows the minister to apply to a court for an order to cease a persons Australian citizenship.

The Act (Section 36C) states that the court may make an order to cease a persons Australian citizenship if:

  • the person is aged 14 years or over;
  • the person is a dual national;
  • the person has been convicted of one or more serious offences;
  • the court has imposed a period or periods of imprisonment that total at least three years or more; and
  • the conduct the offence relates to is so serious and significant that it demonstrates that the person has repudiated their allegiance to Australia.

Serious offences specified in the Act, are provided under theCriminal Codeand include:

  • certain terrorism offences including breaches of Extended Supervision Orders and Interim Supervision Orders;
  • treason;
  • espionage;
  • foreign interference;
  • advocating mutiny;
  • foreign incursions and recruitment offences; and
  • certain explosives and lethal devices offences.
'March for Australia' is not common-sense patriotism its a Nazi-led mobilisation

The messaging for the viral rally is slippery and vague, but the organisers are just another restructure of the far-right.

In deciding whether a persons conduct is so serious and significant that it demonstrates they have repudiated their allegiance to Australia, the court must consider:

  • whether the person has engaged in conduct that demonstrates a repudiation of the values, democratic beliefs, rights and liberties which underpin Australian society;
  • the degree, duration or scale of the persons commitment to, or involvement in, the conduct constituting to which the offence relates;
  • the intended scale of the conduct to which the conviction relates;
  • the actual impact of the conduct to which the conviction relates; and
  • whether the conduct caused, or was intended to cause, harm to human life or a loss of human life.

While Sewells actions may meet some of these requirements, they certainly dont meet them all. Sewells actions would not meet the fourth and fifth requirements of s36C. Any application to a court for cessation of Sewells citizenship would fail.

Some have advocated that citizenship law should be amended to enable the cessation of citizenship of those who express and advocate neo-Nazi beliefs. But Australia is well past the point in its history where we ban certain political beliefs (such as attempts to ban the Communist Party in the 1950s). That would be a very slippery slope.

Sewell will now be charged by the police for his violent actions. That will be considered by a court and if found guilty, he will serve whatever sentence he is given. That is how it should be.

DrAbul Rizviisan Independent Australia columnistand a former Deputy Secretary of the Department of Immigration. You can follow Abul@RizviAbul.

More Christchurch News

Access More

Sign up for Christchurch News

a daily newsletter full of things to discuss over drinks.and the great thing is that it's on the house!