logo
Australia poised to pass a million refugee intake milestone

Australia poised to pass a million refugee intake milestone

Australia's handling of refugees this century has been problematic to some, shameful to others, but next November we will reach a milestone that is not only cause for celebration but a reflection of our best selves.
Refugee Council of Australia chief executive Paul Power says the 1 million mark is expected to be reached in November after the Department of Home Affairs' declaration in June that Australia had accepted more than 985,000 refugees since World War II.
It is an achievement that would make many countries proud, but Australia has accepted refugees from the earliest days of European settlement as people fled homelands with the aim of finding a better life.
The first refugees, Lutherans fleeing religious intolerance in Prussia, arrived in South Australia in 1839, just a handful of years after it became the first colony established specifically as a free settlement. Others from the Continent followed and after Federation, refugees continued to arrive as unassisted migrants, provided they met restrictions imposed by the Immigration (Restriction) Act 1901, the cornerstone of the White Australia Policy. Between 1933 and 1939, more than 7000 Jews fleeing Nazi Germany were settled.
World War II wrecked Europe and raised our awareness of vulnerability, and the Labor government in 1947 brought both issues together with an immigration program to meet labour shortages that eventually welcomed more than 170,000 refugees, the largest groups from Poland, Yugoslavia, Latvia, Lithuania, Estonia, Ukraine, Czechoslovakia and Hungary.
Next came refugees fleeing persecution in Soviet bloc nations, Asians expelled from Uganda and then Chileans, Cypriots and East Timorese, before the fall of Saigon in 1975 saw resettlement of more than 100,000 Vietnamese.
For years few questioned the refugee status of new arrivals. But an Indonesian fishing boat carrying 433 Afghans stranded off Christmas Island in August 2021 changed all that.
Then prime minister John Howard sent the SAS to stop their rescue ship, Tampa, from landing and declared, 'we will decide who comes to this country and the circumstances in which they come'. These were not refugees, they were asylum seekers who had 'queue jumped'. They became a political rallying cry and three months later the Coalition was re-elected with a 3 per cent swing.
Offshore detention was introduced, then abolished by Labor, and re-established by Labor. It continues: last month 112 asylum seekers were still in Nauru and 104 in Papua New Guinea, while 850 people remain in Australia without any resettlement pathway.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Kremlin not ruling out Putin-Trump talks in Beijing
Kremlin not ruling out Putin-Trump talks in Beijing

West Australian

time21 minutes ago

  • West Australian

Kremlin not ruling out Putin-Trump talks in Beijing

The Kremlin is not ruling out the possibility of a meeting between Vladimir Putin and Donald Trump if the Russian and US presidents are both in Beijing at the same time in September. Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov confirmed Putin will visit China for events to mark the 80th anniversary of the end of World War II, but says Moscow has not heard if Trump plans to go. "You know that we are preparing for a trip to Beijing, our president is preparing for this trip... But we have not heard that President Trump is also going there, to Beijing," Peskov said when asked if the two leaders could meet, including possibly in a three-way format with Chinese President Xi Jinping. "If it so happens that (Trump) is there, then, of course, we cannot rule out that the question of the expediency of holding a meeting will be raised," Peskov told reporters. The Times newspaper reported last week that China was positioning itself to hold a summit between Trump and Putin. Putin and Trump have spoken at least six times since Trump returned to the White House in January. The Kremlin has said it is in favour of a face-to-face meeting between them, but this would need careful preparation in order to produce results. Trump has expressed growing frustration with the Russian leader over a lack of progress towards ending the war in Ukraine, saying earlier this month that "we get a lot of bullshit thrown at us by Putin". Trump said last week he would impose new sanctions on Russia and buyers of its exports in 50 days unless Moscow agreed to a peace deal. That deadline will expire in early September, coinciding with the war anniversary events in Beijing.

Kremlin not ruling out Putin-Trump talks in Beijing
Kremlin not ruling out Putin-Trump talks in Beijing

Perth Now

time21 minutes ago

  • Perth Now

Kremlin not ruling out Putin-Trump talks in Beijing

The Kremlin is not ruling out the possibility of a meeting between Vladimir Putin and Donald Trump if the Russian and US presidents are both in Beijing at the same time in September. Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov confirmed Putin will visit China for events to mark the 80th anniversary of the end of World War II, but says Moscow has not heard if Trump plans to go. "You know that we are preparing for a trip to Beijing, our president is preparing for this trip... But we have not heard that President Trump is also going there, to Beijing," Peskov said when asked if the two leaders could meet, including possibly in a three-way format with Chinese President Xi Jinping. "If it so happens that (Trump) is there, then, of course, we cannot rule out that the question of the expediency of holding a meeting will be raised," Peskov told reporters. The Times newspaper reported last week that China was positioning itself to hold a summit between Trump and Putin. Putin and Trump have spoken at least six times since Trump returned to the White House in January. The Kremlin has said it is in favour of a face-to-face meeting between them, but this would need careful preparation in order to produce results. Trump has expressed growing frustration with the Russian leader over a lack of progress towards ending the war in Ukraine, saying earlier this month that "we get a lot of bullshit thrown at us by Putin". Trump said last week he would impose new sanctions on Russia and buyers of its exports in 50 days unless Moscow agreed to a peace deal. That deadline will expire in early September, coinciding with the war anniversary events in Beijing.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store