This Item is derived from WS Weerasooriya, Links Between Sri Lanka and Australia, Colombo, Government Press 1988, pp.30-41 and was prepared for Thuppahi by David Sansoni of Sydney on the confused foundations of a muddled pdf copy.
Overseas immigration has been responsible for a substantial increase in Australia’s population growth. It has been estimated that of the population growth between 1788-1913, 35 per cent was the result of immigration and 65 per cent from natural growth (National Population Inquiry 1975). From the beginning, the preferred migrant was British, and, until the Second World War, the Anglo-Saxon characteristics of the population were strongly maintained (Price 1973).
The “White Australia Policy” which was introduced by the Commonwealth Parliament in 1901 through the Immigration Restrictive Act of that year prevented non-European persons from migrating to Australia. Despite some minor administrative changes in the 1960s, this restrictive immigration policy remained unchanged until the election of the Labour Government in 1972.










