Friday, June 26, 2026
ADVT 
International

Sikh Population In Australia Grows By 78 Per Cent In Five Years

Darpan News Desk IANS, 30 Jun, 2017 02:01 PM
    The population of Sikhs in Australia has grown by 75% in five years, according to the census 2016 data released by the Australian government over this week.
     
     
    With 1.26 lakh followers – up from 72,000 five years ago – Sikhism is now the fifth largest religion of the country, after Christianity, Islam, Buddhism and Hinduism.
     
     
    In the 2006 census, Sikhism was not even among 20 religions recorded in Australia. As compared to the 2006 census that had recorded just about 26,000 Sikhs, there has been a five-fold rise in the community’s numbers Down Under in a decade.
     
     
    The migration of Sikhs to Australia dates back to 150 years, but the past decade has seen a massive surge of student migration rather than skilled migration, from Punjab.
     
     
    The rush Down Under on student visa is seen as passport to permanent residency. Lack of employment opportunities in India and the lure of better lifestyle are the driving factors.
     
     
    Though the latest census shows the Sikhs forming 0.5% of Australia’s 2.4 crore population, a sizeable number of them may still not be permanent citizens of this country.
     
     
    The last census of 2011 shows that the largest component of Sikhs was living on rent because they didn’t own a home and a majority represented the newly arrived student community.
     
     
    Australian immigration law has toughened up considerably since 2009. Skill lists, visa rules, and permanent residency requirements have changed rapidly. Despite that, the huge influx of new Sikh and Punjabi-speaking arrivals has continued in a steep upward trajectory in the last five years, with Victoria emerging as the destination of choice for them.
     
     
    Victoria, with Melbourne as its capital, is home to 52,762 Sikhs, followed by New South Wales ( 31,737), Queensland (17,433), Western Australia (11,897), South Australia (8,808) and Canberra (2,142). Northern Territory and Tasmania have a smaller population of under 700 Sikhs each.
     
     
     
     
     
    Hinduism, another religion with its roots in India, has grown three-fold since the 2006 census which recorded 1.48 lakh Hindus in Australia.
     
     
    The latest census data has recorded 4.4 lakh Hindus – a little less than 2% of the country’s population. Hindus are more densely populated in New South Wales with Sydney as its capital.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    German experts for Malaysian plane crash probe

    German experts for Malaysian plane crash probe
    The German government will send two experts to Ukraine to support the MH17 crash probe, a media report said Saturday....

    German experts for Malaysian plane crash probe

    Israel agrees to humanitarian ceasefire in Gaza

    Israel agrees to humanitarian ceasefire in Gaza
    Israel has agreed to a two-hour humanitarian ceasefire proposed by the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) to evacuate casualties in...

    Israel agrees to humanitarian ceasefire in Gaza

    Russia, US favour ICAO's leading role in MH17 probe

    Russia, US favour ICAO's leading role in MH17 probe
    Russia and the US Saturday agreed that the International Civil Aviation Organisation (ICAO) should be guaranteed leading role in investigating the...

    Russia, US favour ICAO's leading role in MH17 probe

    Pakistan begins 'clean-up' of militants in North Waziristan

    Pakistan begins 'clean-up' of militants in North Waziristan
     Pakistani security forces have started a clean-up operation against militants in Mirali in North Waziristan, the Pakistan Army said Saturday.

    Pakistan begins 'clean-up' of militants in North Waziristan

    MH17 Tragedy: Blame game continues

    MH17 Tragedy: Blame game continues
    The forces of the Kiev government and their militia foes continued to accuse each other Saturday of launching the missile that caused the death of 298 people...

    MH17 Tragedy: Blame game continues

    Crashed Malaysian flight wasn't in restricted airspace'

    Crashed Malaysian flight wasn't in restricted airspace'
    The International Air Transport Association (IATA) said Thursday that it was believed the crashed Malaysia Airlines flight had not traversed to restricted airspace.

    Crashed Malaysian flight wasn't in restricted airspace'