Police in Vienna said on Sunday that they detained more than 50 people as they clashed with protesters trying to disrupt a march by hundreds of right-wing extremists. The demonstrations on Saturday came as Austria's political parties gear up for September parliamentary elections that are expected to see the far-right make significant gains. Anti-fascist groups and left-leaning political parties had called for protests against a demonstration and march by identitarian and other hard-right activists, the Austrian Press Agency reported. Social media posts showed marchers in downtown Vienna with a banner calling for "remigration," a term used to advocate for the mass return of migrants to their countries of origin. Hundreds of officers were deployed to keep apart the opposing groups — each several hundred strong. Forty-three people were temporarily detained for refusing to end a sit-down protest blocking the march, APA reported, citing city police. A further 10 were detained after some masked protesters threw rocks and bottles. Three officers were injured and the windows of a patrol car smashed, police said. Before the violence began the far-right marched under a banner that read in English: "The kids want remigration" meaning Interior Minister Gehard Karner, a conservative, said police would prosecute offences, including during demonstrations, "whether they are committed by left or right-wing extremists or other enemies of democracy." Austria goes to the polls on Sept. 29 for elections expected to confirm a recent pan-European trend by swinging toward the political right. The far-right Freedom Party narrowly beat the conservative People's Party in recent elections to the European Parliament. Politicians from left-leaning parties including the Greens — the conservatives' current coalition partner — and the opposition Social Democrats warn that a government that includes the Freedom Party would embolden right-wing radicals. "The want nothing other than the end of our pluralistic democratic society," said Eva Blimlinger, a spokesperson for the Greens. — Euronews