Australia bars provocateur Milo Yiannopoulos over massacre comments

Australia bars provocateur Milo Yiannopoulos over massacre comments

Immigration Minister David Coleman said that Milo Yiannopoulos will not be allowed to enter Australia for his proposed tour this year.

Milo Yiannopoulos addresses the media during a news conference in New York, US. (Reuters pic)
SYDNEY:
Australia has denied a visa to right-wing provocateur Milo Yiannopoulos after he responded to the mosque massacre in New Zealand by branding Islam “barbaric” and “alien”, officials said Saturday.

“Milo Yiannopoulos will not be allowed to enter Australia for his proposed tour this year,” Immigration Minister David Coleman said in a statement.

“Mr Yiannopoulos’ comments on social media regarding the Christchurch terror attack are appalling and foment hatred and division,” he said.

Australian media has reported that the government of Prime Minister Scott Morrison already decided in March not to grant a visa to Yiannopoulos, but then changed its position after protests from conservatives in the ruling Liberal Party.

The government normally declines to comment on individual visa decisions but made an exception Saturday in light of the global outrage over the killing of 49 Muslims in New Zealand by an Australian-born right-wing extremist.

The move came after Yiannopoulos posted comments on Facebook that said attacks like the New Zealand massacre happen because of governments “mollycoddle … barbaric, alien religious cultures.”

Cameron countered that the “terrorist attack in Christchurch was carried out on Muslims peacefully practising their religion.”

“It was an act of pure evil,” he said.

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