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The Welcome to Country at Melbourne's Anzac Day Dawn Service was booed by a group of protesters, one of whom is a known neo-Nazi.
Hushed whispers had earlier filled the air as masses of people turned out under the cloak of pre-dawn darkness in Melbourne on Friday to commemorate those who paid the ultimate sacrifice.
But the air of reverence for Australia and New Zealand's fallen servicemen and women was broken during Bunurong elder Mark Brown's Welcome to Country, when heckles and boos came from a group of around six to ten people near the front of the crowd.
'This morning, I'm here to welcome everybody to my father's country, beautiful Bunurong country,' Mr Brown said as the boos and jeers echoed out.
Their voices were picked up by microphones and loudspeakers, making the disturbance clearly audible to the rest of the crowd.
'It's our country!' one yelled.
'We don't have to be welcomed!' screamed another.
The boos and shouts lasted on-and-off during the entire five minutes of the Welcome to Country, as Mr Brown carried on with his address in his sonorous voice.

Bunurong Uncle Mark Brown elder delivers the Welcome to country during the Anzac Day dawn service at Shrine Of Remembrance in Melbourne that was booed

Neo Nazi Jacob Hersant was allegedly one of the men who took part in the booing
Mr Brown's words were in stark contrast to the jeers from the smattering of protesters.
'By acknowledging and encompassing the deep ritual heritage of all of our people, we strive to foster mutual respect, cultural exchange and a celebration of diversities,' he said.
After the Welcome to Country, Victorian Governor Margaret Gardner delivered the official Anzac Day address, which acknowledged Aboriginal Australians.
This prompted yet more boos.
'How many more? This is s***,' one man reportedly shouted.
A woman then shouted 'always was, always will be' - before the crowd erupted with applause and helped drown out the disquiet.
Jacob Hersant, a prominent neo-Nazi figure, was allegedly among those loudly booing.
'This is a day for the Anzacs, it's not for Aboriginals,' he told media after the service.
Hersant was spoken to by police and escorted from the service. It is understood he did not perform a Nazi salute, despite some reports.
Defence Minister Richard Marles described the booing as 'outrageous and appalling', and branded those responsible as 'just idiots'.

Protesters' boos echoed through loudspeakers during Uncle Mark Brown's Welcome to Country at the Anzac Day service

The boos and shouts lasted on-and-off during the entire five minutes of the Welcome to Country, as Mr Brown carried on with his address in his sonorous voice
'It should be condemned in the strongest possible terms,' Mr Marles told Sky News.
'It was a small number of people. The vast majority of people who were here this morning were wanting to commemorate and acknowledge Anzac day in the ways we should expect.'
Opposition Leader Peter Dutton called for the police to 'come down heavily' on the disruptors.
'Our diggers fought against the Nazis. That this movement, the neo-Nazis, has any presence in our country at all is just an outrage and a disgrace,' he told Channel Nine.
'You look at the Nazi ideology, the deaths that it led to, the destruction - not just in Europe but across the world … that it could be glorified by Australians here shows that these people are mentally unwell.'
Victoria Premier Jacinta Allan also unleashed on the act of disrespect.
'To pierce the sombre silence and to pierce the solemnity of the Dawn Service isn’t just disrespectful, it dishonours the very thing that the men and women who fought and lost their lives is about,' Ms Allan told ABC Radio.
'It’s beyond disappointing and again, runs counter to why we gather at the Shrine at dawn.'
Victoria Police said they had 'identified a 26-year-old man from Kensington in relation to the behaviour'.
'He has subsequently been interviewed for offensive behaviour and police will proceed via summons,' they added.
'The male has been directed to leave the Shrine of Remembrance.’'
Anzac Day marks the moment thousands of Australian and New Zealand soldiers rowed towards the desolate shores of Gallipoli at half light during World War I.
Over 600 were killed on April 25, 1915, alone, with nearly 9,000 Australians and almost 3,000 New Zealanders killed during the bloody Gallipoli campaign.
A Welcome to Country is a traditional ceremony performed by Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander elders to formally welcome visitors to their land and to give their blessing for events taking place on their traditional lands
While the small ceremonies are intended to be friendly and inclusive, it has proved divisive, with some claiming it is a token gesture and a symbol of woke culture.
Senator Jacinta Nampijinpa Price previously said Australia was 'saturated' with it, which was 'removing the sacredness of certain traditional culture and practices'.
'It's just become almost like a throwaway line. We don't want to see all these symbolic gestures. We want to see real action,' she said.
The incident has been quickly condemned by RSL Victoria, which said the heckling was completely out of keeping with the intention of the solemn event.
Service men and women and their descendants will later march from Princes Bridge near Federation Square to the shrine before commemorations end with a wreath-laying service.