Group: | North African and Middle Eastern Australians |
Population: | Approximately 3.2% of the population (2021 census)[1] Lebanese Australians: 248,434 Turkish Australians: 87,164 Iranian Australians: 81,119 Egyptian Australians: 60,164 Arab Australians: 60,095 Iraqi Australians: 57,859 Assyrian Australians: 62,000 Syrian Australians: 29,257 Chaldean Australians: 20,106 Sudanese Australians: 16,809 Palestinian Australians: 15,607 Other North African and Middle Eastern: 11,027 Kurdish Australians: 10,171 |
Languages: | Australian EnglishArabicAramaicAzerbaijaniHebrewKurdishPersianTurkishothers |
Religions: | Christianity (Eastern OrthodoxyOriental OrthodoxyAssyrian Church of the East CatholicismProtestantism) IslamJudaismBaháʼí FaithDruze None (AtheismAgnosticism) ZoroastrianismYazidism MandaeismDeism |
North African and Middle Eastern Australians are the Australians of North African and Middle Eastern ancestry, including naturalised Australians who are immigrants from various regions in the North Africa and Middle East and descendants of such immigrants. At the 2021 census, the number of ancestry responses categorised within North African and Middle Eastern ancestral groups as a proportion of the total population amounted to 3.2%.[1] [2]
Today, North African and Middle Eastern Australians often come from various ethnic, cultural, linguistic, religious, educational and employment backgrounds.
The first settlers of the North Africans and Middle Easterns to Australia date back to 1862, when small groups of mainly Muslim cameleers shipped in and out of Australia at three-year intervals to serve South Australia's inland pastoral industry by carting goods and transportation wool bales by camel trains, who were commonly referred to as "Afghans" or "Ghans", despite their origin often being mainly from British India. Permanent emigration of North Africans and Middle Easterns to Australia began in the 1940s onwards, possibly due to political turmoil in the MENA region that saw a wave of its international migrants., they number 800,000 persons with a nomination of their distinct ancestries.
Australia does not collect statistics on the racial origins of its residents. Instead, it collects data at each five-yearly census on distinct ancestries, of which each census respondent may choose up to two. [3] In the 2021 census, the number of ancestry responses categorized within North African and Middle Eastern ancestral groups as a proportion of the total population amounted to 3.2%. [1]
Algerian Australians | 2,319 | |
Arab Australians | 60,095 | |
Assyrian Australians | 42,346 | |
Bahraini Australians | 166 | |
Bari Australians | 95 | |
Berber Australians | 340 | |
Chaldean Australians | 20,106 | |
Coptic Australians | 1,433 | |
Darfuri Australians | 15 | |
Egyptian Australians | 60,164 | |
Emirati Australians | 63 | |
Iranian Australians | 81,119 | |
Iraqi Australians | 57,859 | |
Jordanian Australians | 6,096 | |
Kurdish Australians | 10,171 | |
Kuwaiti Australians | 815 | |
Lebanese Australians | 248,434 | |
Libyan Australians | 1,076 | |
Mandaean Australians | 918 | |
Moroccan Australians | 4,192 | |
Nubian Australians | 130 | |
Nuer Australians | 185 | |
Omani Australians | 168 | |
Other North African and Middle Eastern | 11,027 | |
Palestinian Australians | 15,607 | |
Qatari Australians | 23 | |
Saudi Arabian Australians | 1,638 | |
Sudanese Australians | 16,809 | |
Syrian Australians | 29,257 | |
Tunisian Australians | 1,037 | |
Turkish Australians | 87,164 | |
Yemeni Australians | 1,443 | |
Yazidi Australians | 876 |
Asylum policy is a contentious wedge issue in Australian politics, with the two major political parties in Australia arguing that the issue is a border control problem and one concerning the safety of those attempting to come to Australia by boat.
In 1999, Middle Eastern immigrants fleeing from oppressive regimes in Afghanistan, Iran and Iraq began to arrive in large numbers.[4] The Howard government extended the time they spent in mandatory detention and introduced temporary protection visas for boat arrivals.[5] The deterrents did little to stop immigrants; roughly 12,000 asylum seekers reached Australia from 1999 to 2001.In 2011, Australia received 2.5% of the world's total number of claims for asylum.[6] During 2012, more than 17,000 asylum seekers arrived via boat.[7] The majority of the refugees came from Afghanistan, Iran, and Sri Lanka.[8] In June 2012, a boatload of asylum seekers capsized in the Indian Ocean between Indonesia and Christmas Island, leading to 17 confirmed deaths, with 70 other people missing.[9]
In 2015, the government rejected suggestions that it would accept Rohingyas (a persecuted Muslim minority in Myanmar) during the Rohingya refugee crisis, with the Prime Minister Tony Abbott responding "Nope, nope, nope. We have a very clear refugee and humanitarian program".[10] However, later in the year the government unexpectedly increased its intake of refugees to accommodate persecuted minorities, such as Maronites, Yazidis and Druze, from the conflicts of the Syrian Civil War and Iraq War.[11] [12] (It was these refugees who swelled the figures for 2016–2017.[13])
See main article: Islamophobia in Australia. Islamophobia is highly speculative and affective distrust and hostility towards Muslims, Islam, and those perceived as following the religion.[14] This social aversion and bias is often facilitated and perpetuated in the media through the stereotyping of Muslims as violent and uncivilised. Various Australian politicians and political commentators have capitalised on these negative stereotypes and this has contributed to the marginalisation, discrimination and exclusion of the Muslim community.[15]
Islamophobia and intolerance towards Muslims existed well prior to the September 11 attacks in the United States. For example, Muslim immigration to Australia was restricted under the White Australia Policy (1901-1975).[16]