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  • A riot at one of Australia’s immigration detention facilities has sparked renewed interest

  • into the country’s controversial immigration policies. Incoming migrants are prevented

  • from entering the country, and are instead sent to detention centers located in the South

  • Pacific, where they can be held indefinitely. As a whole, Australia has been marred by accusations

  • of racism and xenophobia towards both legal and undocumented immigrants. So, Why is Australia

  • So Anti-Immigrant?

  • Well, Australia has a long and dark history of preventing non-white people from living

  • in the country. The first European colonizers referred to the native Australian Aboriginal

  • population assavages,” and brought violence and disease, nearly causing their extinction.

  • After the British took Aboriginal land on the basis of it beingTerra Nullius

  • ornobody’s land,” the native population was refused full citizenship until 1967. Since

  • that time, the Australian government has attempted to balance the scales by helping Aboriginal

  • citizens with social welfare programs. But today, research shows that nearly half of

  • white Australians believe Aboriginals have unfair advantages, with roughly 20% of respondents

  • saying that they would not sit next to an Aboriginal on a bus.

  • In the 1800s, Australia experienced a Gold Rush, bringing waves of immigrants, predominantly

  • from Europe, North America, and China. But anti-Asian legislation was implemented until

  • around 1901 when the different British colonies came together to form a unified Australia.

  • This federation specifically began enacting policies that made it easier for white Europeans

  • to emigrate, and harder for those from non-English speaking countries. The laws were known as

  • White Australia Policy,” and started with the Immigration Restriction Act 1901.

  • The Act worked by having immigrants write out fifty words in a language that was chosen

  • by the immigration officer. In practice, the officers would choose a language they knew

  • the testee would not likely know, and if they failed the test, they would be considered

  • prohibited.”

  • Similar policies worked to mostly prevent non-white immigration, and were only dismantled

  • starting in 1949. It took until 1973 for race to no longer be considered a factor for immigration

  • status in Australia. However, today the government’s views towards immigrants is still needlessly

  • aggressive. The current practice of detaining undocumented migrants has been criticized

  • by Human Rights Watch for the poor conditions in offshore detention facilities. These centers

  • have even been used for the indefinite, mandatory detention of children, despite legislation

  • designed to stop the practice.

  • Moreover, the Australian government began a program in 2013 aimed at preventing asylum

  • seekers and undocumented immigrants from entering the country, called Operation Sovereign Borders.

  • Those who are caught attempting to arrive by boat are often turned back by Australian

  • Defense Forces, and others are sent to detention centers. Legal experts have said that this

  • program violates the 1951 Refugee Convention, the Universal Declaration of Human Rights,

  • and other similar treaties. A controversial ad for the program statesNo way. You Will

  • Not Make Australia Home,” in reference to undocumented immigrants and people smugglers.

  • Despite the fact that Australians of European origin were themselves once immigrants, anti-multiculturalism

  • is still vibrant and widespread.

  • As we mentioned, Aboriginal folks in Australia were once viciously persecuted and still face

  • racism to this day. For an overview of the country’s Indigenous people, watch our video.

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A riot at one of Australia’s immigration detention facilities has sparked renewed interest

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