On Tuesday 15th August at around 12:40pm, a fleet of supercars, organized by a Sydney-based Australian Chinese automobile club, started their parade, led by a red Bentley covered by Chinese flag pattern.

Sydney Today

Bentleys, Lamborghinis, BMW, AUDI and Maseratis were among the 10 luxury cars that joined the parade across Sydney, passing three universities including Sydney University, the University of New South Wales and the University of Technology Sydney. It comes not long after a spate of racist anti-Chinese graffiti and posters were identified in Universities across Australia.

Additionally, the cars continued their parade past some places of interest including Chinatown, Martin Place, Sydney Opera House, the Art Gallery of NSW, before arriving at their ultimate destination - the Consulate General of India in Sydney.

Sydney Today

The cars were decorated with the Chinese flag and stickers featuring slogans including: "Borderline is our baseline;" "China: Not even a bit can be left behind;" and, "Anyone who offends China will be killed no matter how far the target is."

"Anyone who offends China will be killed no matter how far the target is."

The latter is a hard-core tagline of a recent Chinese patriotic action film Wolf Warriors 2.

The cars revved their engines loudly outside the Consulate General of India in Sydney, to protest against India over an escalating military situation between India and China, with both sides accusing the other of territorial intrusions.

The day they chose for the protests was of particular significance as Indian Australians around the country celebrated Independence day - marking the 70 anniversary of the handover from British rule.

Sydney Today

Sydney Today

"To demonstrate our determination to defense our sovereignty in a civilized way."

The organiser, who requested to remain anonymous, told local Chinese media outlet Sydney Today that the drivers voluntarily joined the demonstration, aiming to attract public attention to the meaning of the parade, not just to show off their cars.

The organiser said therefore that all the drivers chose to drive slowly and "strictly comply with road rules - with no horn, no speeding and not window-opening".

"To demonstrate our determination to defense our sovereignty in a civilized way," said the organizer.

"We are a group of hard working people and hope to contribute to the community. We are not those who got nothing to do but drive around. We hope people recognized our actions.”

However not everyone in the community agrees with the protest.

A comment left on Weibo, a Chinese social media platform, describes it as "pretentious behaviors by the rich second generation". Another comment condemns government's inaction, "why do we pay (tax) to have the army then? "

The news has also stirred up some discussion on SBS Punjabi's Facebook page.

Consulate General of India in Sydney told SBS Mandarin via phone that they were neither aware nor affected by the car protest as the Consulate was officially closed on the Independence Day.

Below - More on the Himalayan border dispute from SBS News:

0:00 Tensions flare between China and India 00:00 / 00:00 Share Share on Twitter

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Images supplied with permission by Sydney Today.