Ticket-holding Aboriginal protesters have been patted down and searched while trying to enter the Commonwealth Games closing ceremony.

A video uploaded to Facebook by The Black Rising magazine shows a group of protesters, who had paid $250 for 15 tickets, escorted to a fenced off area surrounded by a large number of police.

The woman filming the video said: 'There is a group of people from Camp Freedom that have got tickets to the closing ceremony, we've been pulled aside and we are currently surrounded by police officers.

A video uploaded to Facebook by The Black Rising magazine shows a group of protesters escorted to a fenced off area surrounded by a large number of police

Ticket-holding Aboriginal protesters have been patted down and searched while trying to enter the Commonwealth Games closing ceremony

'Men and women were subject to a pat down before we reached the security gates of the stadium.'

'We’ve been held up and for some reason we can’t move on. The closing ceremony is well and truly under way.

We are currently in a fenced area. We have been treated completely different to everyone else entering the stadium.

Video footage posted online shows an arsonist setting fire to the Commonwealth Games countdown clock

'Our tickets are exactly the same. Waiting to determine whether we can get in for some reason that relates to what we’re wearing.'

Another video uploaded to Facebook by The Black Rising magazine shows the group at a second security check.

'We are being treated differently due to the colour of out skin,' a woman in the video says.

'We have been completely discriminated against.'

This comes after footage posted online showed arsonists setting the Games' countdown clock alight in dissent of arrests that were made on the Gold Coast last week.

It is understood the fire was lit in support of Stolenwealth protesters - with the message attached to the video expressing support for those who were allegedly brutalised by police, Nine News reports.

'Yesterday in Meanjin (Brisbane, so called Australia) we watched on social media as the police brutalised and arrested peaceful Stolenwealth Games protesters on the Gold Coast,' reads the caption.

'Our action is in no way endorsed by Stolenwealth Games organisers and protesters (who have no knowledge of it), but they have our solidarity through this and more practical acts.'

The video shows a hooded protester torching the clock with an accelerant.

A hooded figure can be seen dousing the flames with an accelerant as the clock catches fire

The act was purportedly a demonstration of solidarity with Stolenwealth protesters who were arrested last week (pictured: Dylan Voller, one of five arrested)

It's the latest display of anarchy in what has proven to be a controversial Games overall, with Indigenous activists staging multiple demonstrations before and during the 11-day event.

Now, with less than 24 hours left of the 2018 competition, concerns are rising over what protesters might still have in store.

The Warriors of Aboriginal Resistance have warned on their Facebook page that Sunday night's closing ceremony would be their 'biggest action yet'.

But organising committee chairman Peter Beattie claims organisers are prepared for any potential unrest.

'The police have put contingencies and plans in place to deal with these issues,' Beattie said on Saturday.

Concerns are rising over what might still be in store for the closing ceremony on Sunday night

The official Commonwealth Games website sums up the closing ceremony as an 'emotional, fun and dazzling finale.

'As the baton is passed to the 2022 Commonwealth Games, the Gold Coast will say its goodbyes and show the world that it knows a thing or two about throwing a great party.

'This is your ticket to party with the Commonwealth.'