The '''Pacific Island Labourers Act 1901''' was an
Act of the
Parliament of Australia which was designed to facilitate the mass deportation of nearly all the
Pacific Islanders working in Australia. Along with the
Immigration Restriction Act 1901, enacted six days later, it formed an important part of the
White Australia policy. In
1901, there were approximately 10,000 Pacific Islanders working in Australia, most in the
sugar cane industry in
Queensland and northern
New South Wales, many working as
indentured labourers. The Act ultimately resulted in the deportation of approximately 7,500 Pacific Islanders.
History of the Act
Beginning in the
1860s, tens of thousands of Pacific Islanders were brought to Australia as low paid labourers. By the early
1890s, 46,000 labourers had arrived in Queensland, and up to 62,000 labourers arrived in all. Many of these people were forcibly removed from their homes, in a process called "
blackbirding", by which Islanders were either kidnapped or deceived into travelling to Australia. They were brought to fuel the growing need for cheap labour in the sugar industry, since white labour was scarce and expensive. The majority of labourers were employed under indentured labour arrangements, whereby they received either no pay or extremely small amounts of pay. By
1880, Queensland legislation prevented Pacific Islanders from working in higher paid jobs in
sugar mills and other industrial areas, and limited them to manual agricultural labour.
Provisions of the Act
The Act prohibited any Pacific Islanders from entering Australia after
March 31 1904, and required all those entering before then to have a license. During the year
1902, the maximum number of licences that could be issued was limited to three-quarters of the number of Pacific Islanders who left Australia in
1901. During
1903, this license quota lowered even further, to half of the total departures in 1902. Any person who brought a Pacific Islander into the country contrary to the Act could be fined
GBP 100.
Any Pacific Islander found in Australia after
December 31 1906 could be deported immediately by order of the Minister for External Affairs, and any Islander found in Australia before that date, who had not been employed under an
indentured labour agreement at any time in the preceding month, could be deported immediately. It was an offence to employ a Pacific Islander in any other way than an indentured labour agreement, punishable by a fine of
GBP 100. All such agreements were cancelled on December 31 1906.
References
#
A history of South Sea Islanders in Australia