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Cabramatta is a suburb of Sydney, New South Wales (NSW), Australia, It is part of the Local Government Areas in Australia Local Government Area of the City of Fairfield, 32 km south-west of the Sydney CBD. It is predominantly populated by Vietnamese people, but many other Asian and European populations as well. Cabramatta also possesses mostly Vietnamese and Chinese businesses, with some Thai, Lao, Yugoslavian, Italian and Cambodian businesses also present. The suburb has a longstanding image problem, primarily due to its reputation as a popular distribution point for drugs, especially heroin, particularly around its railway station. Looking past this veneer, one finds that Cabramatta has been a remarkable melting pot for all manner of Asian and European peoples in the latter half of the 20th century. Image File history File links Cabramatta_shops. ...
Image File history File links Cabramatta_shops. ...
The Sydney central business district (CBD) is, commercially, the most important in Australia. ...
Cabramatta is fast becoming the Asian food capital of Greater Sydney. It is Australia's largest restaurant and shopping precinct. There are a large number of restaurants with Vietnamese, Thai, Chinese cuisines.
History
The name first came into use in the area in the early 19th Century, when a family by the name of Bull named a property that they had purchased Cabramatta Park. When a small village formed nearby in 1814, it took its name from that property. A township grew from this village, and a railway was built through Cabramatta in the 1850s. It was used for loading and unloading freight and livestock. However, Cabramatta did not get a railway station until 1870. The railway station wasn't open for public transport until 1872, a school was then established in 1882 and post office in 1886. Cabramatta remained a predominantly agricultural township. The origin of the suburb's name is a local Aboriginal word meaning "Place of Good Fish". It developed a close community relationship with neighbouring Canley Vale, and until 1899, they shared a common municipality. In 1948, Cabramatta's local government merged with that of the neighbouring Fairfield, and today remains governed by the Fairfield City Council. The City of Fairfield is a Local Government Area in the south-west of Sydney, in the state of New South Wales, Australia. ...
It evolved into a Sydney suburb in the mid 20th century, partly as the result of a major state housing project in the nearby Liverpool area in the 1960s that in turn swallowed Cabramatta. Liverpool is a suburb in the City of Liverpool in south western Sydney, in the state of New South Wales, Australia. ...
The presence of a migrant hostel alongside Cabramatta High School was decisive in shaping the community in the post-war period. In the first phase, large numbers of post-war immigrants from Europe passed through the hostel and settled in the surrounding area during the 1950s and 1960s. They satisfied labour demand for surrounding manufacturing and construction activities, and eventually gave birth to a rapidly growing population in the late 1960s and early 1970s. The entrepreneurs amongst them were hard at work building all manner and scale of enterprises. In the 1980s, Cabramatta and the surrounding Fairfield area was characterised by a diversity of Australian-born children having migrant parents. Cabramatta High School was statistically the most diverse and multicultural school in Sydney, and a study showed that only 10% of children had both parents born in Australia. While many other parts of Sydney had their particular ethnic flavour, Cabramatta was something of a melting pot, yet to find a clear identity. Fairfield is a suburb in the City of Fairfield, in south-western Sydney, in the state of New South Wales, Australia, about 30 kilometres from the Sydney central business district. ...
Across the 1980s, many of these migrant parents and their children - now young adults - were to settle and populate new housing developments in surrounding areas such as Smithfield and Bonnyrigg that were, until that time, market gardens or semi-rural areas owned by the previous generation. In the 1960s and 1970s, the migrant hostel - along with its peer in Villawood - hosted a second wave of migration: this time from south-east Asia as a result of the Vietnam War. During the 1980s, Cabramatta was transformed into a thriving Asian community, displacing many of the previous migrant generation. The students of Cabramatta High School represented all manner of people with Asian or European descent. The bustling city centre of Cabramatta could have been confused with the streets of Saigon and historic "Chinatown", while the Sydney CBD appeared very Western in comparison. Combatants Republic of Vietnam United States Republic of Korea Thailand Australia New Zealand The Philippines National Front for the Liberation of South Vietnam Democratic Republic of Vietnam Peopleâs Republic of China Democratic Peoples Republic of Korea Strength US 1,000,000 South Korea 300,000 Australia 48,000...
By the early 1980s migration to Cabramatta declined, and as a result the migrant hostel and its many hundreds of small empty apartments lay prey to vandalism and the antics of teenagers. Only the language school remained: it continued to teach English as a Second Language into the early 1990s, until the entire hostel site was demolished and redeveloped into residential housing. A walk through the hostel before its demolition would have revealed closed and boarded-up corrugated iron buildings once home to kitchens, washing facilities, administration and so forth - buildings with a lifetime of history to tell. By the 1990s, Cabramatta seemed to have developed its own identity. Liverpool grew into a bustling commercial and consumer centre of the region, taking much of the shine away from Fairfield which to date has never seemed to have recovered its former glory. In between these two, Cabramatta became uniquely, and infamously, known by its specialist niche reputation in the city as 'the' place for an authentic Asian experience.
Crime problems Cabramatta has become renowned for its severe crime problems, the most notable of these being the distribution of Drug-dealing. However, Cabramatta has been recorded as one of the most 'overeported' areas. These drug activities began in the 1990s. Much of the drug-dealing is reported to be done by juveniles of predominantly Vietnamese origin. Many drug addicts were drawn to this area and a train stopping at Cabramatta Station was known as the "smack express" to these addicts. Many of them indulged in their habit in the immediate Cabramatta area, with some dying from overdoses in places such as public toilets.[citation needed] Retail selling Street selling is the bottom of the chain and can be accomplished through purchasing from prostitutes, through cloaked retail stores or refuse houses for users in the act located in red-light districts which often also deal in paraphernalia, dealers marketing merriment at night clubs and other events...
In law, a person who is not yet a legal adult is known as a minor (known in some places as an infant or juvenile). ...
The heroin problem, and attempts to contain it, have been the source of much controversy and failed actions involving politicians, senior police, human rights organisations and the media. As of 2002, the problem has been reported as having receded. Heroin ((INN) Diacetylmorphine, (BAN) diamorphine) is a semi-synthetic opioid. ...
For album titles with the same name, see 2002 (album). ...
Cabramatta is also remembered for the political murder of a NSW State MP, John Newman, outside his Cabramatta home in September, 1994. This was Australia's first ever political assassination and thus this assassination drew much attention and alarm. A local nightclub owner and political rival, Phuong Ngo, was convicted of the murder in 2001 and sentenced to life imprisonment. Two of Ngo's associates were found not guilty of the murder. In 2003, Ngo failed in an appeal against his sentence. John Paul Newman, born John Naumenko, (December 8, 1946 - September 5, 1994) was a member of the New South Wales state parliament and Member for the seat of Cabramatta. ...
1994 (MCMXCIV) was a common year starting on Saturday of the Gregorian calendar, and was designated as the International Year of the Family and the International Year of the Sport and the Olympic Ideal by United Nations. ...
This article or section does not cite its references or sources. ...
Phuong Ngo was convicted of ordering the killing Australian MP John Newman in September, 1994. ...
2001 (MMI) was a common year starting on Monday of the Gregorian calendar. ...
This transcript of an 1997 episode of the Australian current affairs program "Four Corners" explored the Cabramatta scene and its heroin and murder problems. Australians old and new (Economist print edition, May 5th 2005)] relates: "A quarter of Australia's population was born abroad, and another quarter is made up of first-generation natives. At a time of globalisation, this is a tremendous strength, and with unemployment at its lowest level for almost 30 years further immigration is unlikely to provoke much discontent. Parts of Sydney are already starting to feel noticeably Asian. The suburb of Cabramatta, in the south-west, has a large Vietnamese population: walk around its main market area, and you will hardly see an English sign. But it is not a ghetto: most people who live there work elsewhere, and as people get richer, they swiftly move to more affluent areas." |