Australian nationalist Thomas Sewell has been unbanned from X, six months after his account was suspended following a mass-reporting campaign.
Mr Sewell, the leader of the European Australian Movement and a leading figure in right-wing activist group the National Socialist Network, had his account and Premium status restored on January 3, the same day as the birth of second daughter Aurora, and he has since gained thousands of new followers.
His last post before being suspended was a screenshot of a notification from X saying the platform had determined a reported post reading “100% B” had violated the rules about “violent speech”.
Mr Sewell told Noticer News that being unbanned right as X owner Elon Musk was attacking the UK government for failing to stop Pakistani child rape gangs from abusing thousands of White English girls “felt like two Christmases at once”.
“I got my account back on the same day as Musk was calling for [UK Prime Minister] Keir Starmer, judges and police to be jailed, and I’ve been calling for that since 2017,” he said.
Since Saturday Mr Sewell has posted about the antiwhite child rape gang scandal a number of times, while Musk on Monday posted “Prison for Starmer” and shared a poll asking whether Americans “should liberate the people of Britain from their tyrannical government”.
Both Musk and Mr Sewell also criticised Mr Starmer’s handling of the anti-immigration protests that erupted across the UK in late July and early August after three young White girls were stabbed to death in Southport, allegedly by a Rwandan teenager.
The Tesla boss launched a series of attacks on Mr Starmer for his draconian crackdown where peaceful protesters and internet commenters were given long jail sentences, accusing the UK government of “two-tier policing”, and at one point posting that “civil war is inevitable”.
During the same period Mr Sewell led 72 black-clad members of the National Socialist Network on a march through Brisbane where they displayed a banner saying “Free England” to show support for the UK protesters, before being beaten and verbally abused by Queensland Police who made several violent arrests
Three demonstrators received serious injuries while being taken into custody, although only one of the four men arrested on the day was charged with the non-violent offence of “inciting others to incite vilification”, and that charge was later dropped.
“White Australians successfully marched through the streets of Brisbane today despite unlawful police violence,” Mr Sewell said at the time.
“We marched to show solidarity with the English people in their struggle, who suffer under the same antiwhite tyranny that attacked us today.”
Header image credit: @ThomasSewellx (X)