A man will face court after allegedly flying a Nazi flag above a Brisbane synagogue at the weekend. The flag’s appearance has disgusted the city’s Lord Mayor Adrian Schrinner, who wants tougher penalties around the use of hate symbols. A Queensland Police spokeswoman said police received a complaint on Saturday morning after the flag was seen out the window of an accommodation block on Margaret Street, which overlooks the heritage-listed Brisbane Synagogue. The flag flying out the window in Margaret Street on Saturday. Queensland Police arrived to removed the flag. The flag was seized just before 11am and a Brisbane man, 45, was charged with public nuisance. He will face court on November 30. The swastika is the symbol of the Nazi party, the far-right anti-Semitic German political party responsible for the murder of six million Jews during World War II. Saturday’s flag-flying is the latest use of Nazi imagery in Queensland in recent months – including graffiti at the Clapham rail yard at Moorooka in May – and comes as law enforcement bodies raise concerns over rising far-right extremism in Australia. Lord Mayor Adrian Schrinner shared a photo of the flag on Saturday – as well as his disgust over its appearance. “This is sickening. For someone to fly this symbol of hatred and genocide right above the Brisbane Synagogue on Margaret St is pure evil. It’s time for this vile flag to be banned in Queensland,” he wrote. “QLD needs to get serious about cracking down on these open displays of racial hatred.” The Brisbane Jewish community also aired their concerns over the flag’s appearance, with Queensland Jewish Board of Deputies vice president Jason Steinberg labelling the incident “sickening”. Meanwhile, Dr Dvir Abramovich, chairman of the Anti-Defamation Commission, said the incident was like “plunging a knife in the heart of Holocaust survivors” and “spitting in the face of the brave Diggers” who fought to defeat Hitler and his genocidal regimen.
via thewest: Man, 45, to front Brisbane court after outrage over Nazi flag flown near synagogue