Wild rumours Kanye West is ALREADY in Melbourne weeks before his planned visit to see new wife Bianca Censori’s family as he’s ‘sighted’ at Red Rooster and A1 Bakery in Brunswick

There have been calls to block him from entering Australia, but if some questionable eyewitness accounts are to be believed, Kanye West is already Down Under.

There have been multiple unconfirmed ‘sightings’ of the rapper known as Ye in Melbourne in recent days, following reports he is due to fly to the Victorian capital in the coming weeks to visit the family of his new ‘wife’ Bianca Censori.

Several Melburnians have taken to TikTok to claim they saw the controversial hip-hop mogul, 45, at a popular Lebanese bakery.

‘I just thought was so funny,’ he told hosts Karl Stefanovic and Sarah Abo. ‘I started getting calls from friends and family… I honestly must have missed something.’

‘But it wasn’t true!’ he laughed.

Many fans agreed the prank sightings were hilarious, leading to even wilder rumours Kanye also visited a Red Rooster and Aldi supermarket.

‘Just saw him ordering at the drive thru of Red Rooster,’ one local joked.

‘Saw him at Aldi in the middle aisle,’ said another, while one prankster even said he was at the viral ‘Fitzroy garage party’.

Kanye and his new wife Bianca Censori, 27, are set to come to Australia soon, and are expected to spend time in Ivanhoe, east of the CBD, where she grew up.

But the Anti-Defamation Commission is lobbying for Immigration Minister Andrew Giles to block entry to the rapper, deriding him as a ‘hatemonger who spews threats against the Jewish community’.

The Anti-Defamation Commission, in calling for Ye’s visa to be blocked, pointed to a previous tweet from the rapper saying he would go ‘death con 3 on Jewish people’.

The commission noted Ye in an October interview repeatedly blamed ‘Jewish media’ and stated the community would, ‘especially in the music industry … take us and milk us till we die’.

In a December interview, Ye also claimed six million Jews had not been murdered by the Holocaust and suggested he liked Hitler and Nazis, the commission said.

‘Calling for violence and hate must have consequences and Australia should not put out the welcome mat and provide a platform to a hatemonger who spews threats against the Jewish community and peddles conspiracy myths about Jewish power, greed and control,’ commission chairman Dvir Abramovich said.

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