Kuwait Times

Australia seeking to settle migrants outside major cities

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SYDNEY: Australia is drawing up plans to require migrants to temporaril­y settle in regional and rural areas to ease congestion in major cities, the government announced yesterday. While much of the vast continent is sparsely populated, Australia is growing at an annual rate of 1.6 percent-one of the highest among OECD countries. Sydney, Melbourne and southeast Queensland are among the fastest-growing urban areas in the world thanks in part to overseas migration, said population minister Alan Tudge. The resulting strain on infrastruc­ture in Australia’s eastern cities cost the economy Aus$15 billion (US$10.6 billion) last year, with annual forecast losses of Aus$40 billion by 2030 if left unchecked, Tudge told an audience at the Menzies Research Centre think-tank in Melbourne.

“This (congestion) is a serious challenge for families and a serious economic challenge for the nation,” he said. “We are working on measures to have more new arrivals go to the smaller states and regions and require them to be there for at least a few years.” Other parts of the country “have barely grown and (are) crying out for more people”, he added. Tudge did not outline how new immigrants would be forced to remain in regional areas, saying this was still to be determined by the government. He flagged a number of other schemes to ease population pressure, including a bigger infrastruc­ture spend and moving public servants out of the big cities.

Critics such as former Australian Border Force chief Roman Quaedvlieg said requiring migrants to live in regional areas could be difficult to enforce. “Migrants will gravitate to opportunit­ies & amenities in cities,” he tweeted yesterday. “It’s not possible to police the condition without substantia­l resources, both identifyin­g breaches & sanctionin­g them.” — AFP

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