The Eritrea-born Community

Historical Background

The Eritrea-born are a relatively new community to Australia.

Eritrea was occupied and colonised by Italy in 1890. In 1941 British forces defeated the Italians and governed Eritrea until 1952, when the United Nations facilitated the formation of the Federation of Eritrea and Ethiopia. Eritrea was awarded formal independence from Ethiopia after a referendum vote in 1993 but a border war continued until 2000.

Before 1983, only a few Eritreans arrived in Australia as refugees, students or stowaways. After 1983, Eritreans fleeing the unrest caused by the struggle for independence were given a special quota under Australia's Humanitarian Program. An average of 100 Eritreans per year were allowed to migrate for the first three years of the program.

Many arrivals were young men whose education had been interrupted by war. Most of them settled in the Melbourne suburbs of Springvale and Maribyrnong and found work in factories.

The 1996 Census recorded 1,160 Eritrea-born living in Australia, most of them living in Victoria. This further increased to 2,020 at the 2006 Census. The Eritrea-born continue to arrive in small numbers under the Humanitarian Program and Family Stream of the Migration Program.

Today

Geographic Distribution

The latest Census in 2011 recorded 2,841 Eritrea-born people in Australia, an increase of 41 per cent from the 2006 Census. The 2011 distribution by state and territory showed Victoria had the largest number with 1,518 followed by Western Australia (454), Queensland (370) and New South Wales (206).

Age and Sex

The median age of the Eritrea-born in 2011 was 39 years compared with 45 years for all overseas-born and 37 years for the total Australian population. The age distribution showed 8.8 per cent were aged 0-14 years, 8.2 per cent were 15-24 years, 49.7 per cent were 25-44 years, 27.5 per cent were 45-64 years and 5.8 per cent were 65 years and over. Of the Eritrea-born in Australia, there were 1393 males (49 per cent) and 1450 females (51 per cent). The sex ratio was 96.1 males per 100 females.

Ancestry

In the 2011 Census, the top ancestry responses* that Eritrea-born people reported were Eritrean (1,945), African, so described, (308) and Somali (101). In the 2011 Census, Australians reported around 300 different ancestries. Of the total ancestry responses*, 4,137 responses were towards Eritrean ancestry.

*At the 2011 Census up to two responses per person were allowed for the Ancestry question; therefore providing the total responses and not persons count.

Language

The main languages spoken at home by Eritrea-born people in Australia were Arabic (1,220), Tigrinya (1,039) and English (114).

Of the 2729 Eritrea-born who spoke a language other than English at home, 74.5 per cent spoke English very well or well, and 23.5 per cent spoke English not well or not at all.

Religion

At the 2011 Census the major religious affiliations amongst Eritrea-born were Islam (1,520), Eastern Orthodox (479) and Catholic (255).

Of the Eritrea-born, 1 per cent stated 'No Religion' which was lower than that of the total Australian population (22.3 per cent), and 1.9 per cent did not state a religion.

Arrival

Compared to 62 per cent of the total overseas-born population, 51.9 per cent of the Eritrea-born people in Australia arrived in Australia prior to 2001.

Among the total Eritrea-born in Australia at the 2011 Census, 21.3 per cent arrived between 2001 and 2006 and 22.7 per cent arrived between 2007 and 2011.

MedianIncome

At the time of the 2011 Census, the median individual weekly income for the Eritrea-born in Australia aged 15 years and over was $358, compared with $538 for all overseas-born and $597 for all Australia-born. The total Australian population had a median individual weekly income of $577.

Qualifications

At the 2011 Census, 47.5 per cent of the Eritrea-born aged 15 years and over had some form of higher non-school qualifications compared to 55.9 per cent of the Australian population.

Of the Eritrea-born aged 15 years and over, 16.3 per cent were still attending an educational institution. The corresponding rate for the total Australian population was 8.6 per cent.

Employment

Among Eritrea-born people aged 15 years and over, the participation rate in the labour force was 58.2 per cent and the unemployment rate was 15.3 per cent. The corresponding rates in the total Australian population were 65 per cent and 5.6 per cent respectively.

Of the 1,242 Eritrea-born who were employed, 28.4 per cent were employed in either a skilled managerial, professional or trade occupation. The corresponding rate in the total Australian population was 48.4 per cent.

Produced by the Community Relations Section of DIAC All data used in this summary is sourced from the Australian Bureau of Statistics Census of Population and Housing. Sources for the Historical Background are available on our website.
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