Australia senate appoints first Muslim woman amid race row

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Mehreen FaruqiImage source, THE GREENS
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Mehreen Faruqi is Australia's first Muslim woman in the senate.

Mehreen Faruqi has joined Australia's senate as its first female Muslim member, on a day the country is caught up in a bitter row over racism.

Ms Faruqi, who was born in Pakistan, told the BBC that Australia's future would be "stronger for our diversity".

The Greens Party MP for New South Wales was appointed by the senate on Wednesday to fill a vacant seat.

It comes as another new senator faces condemnation for a speech calling for a "final solution" on immigration.

Ms Faruqi, who will be sworn in next week, was among the prominent critics of Fraser Anning's use of the Holocaust-associated term.

The trailblazing MP said Mr Anning had "spat in the face of millions of Australians, spewing hate and racism" in his first speech to parliament on Tuesday.

"I'm a Muslim migrant, I'm about to be a Senator and there's not a damn thing Fraser Anning can do about it," she wrote in a piece for website Junkee on Wednesday., external

Second milestone

Dr Faruqi migrated from Pakistan to Australia in 1992 with her young family. Prior to entering politics she held a distinguished career as an academic and has a doctorate in environmental engineering.

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Her election to the state parliament in 2013 made her the first Muslim woman to attain any political office in Australia.

She told the BBC she would use her new role as senator to fight for a "positive future for Australia where we are stronger for our diversity".

She has said that overt displays of racism are not isolated incidents.

In her leaving speech to the NSW parliament on Tuesday, she spoke about enduring "toxic, racist and sexist trolling" in her time as an MP "not because of what I'm doing but because of who I am, where I come from, and the colour of my skin".

And in her Junkee article, she said that with "increasing regularity" politicians were using "race-baiting as an avenue to votes".

"I could stand on Bondi Beach, serving sausage sangers in an Akubra, draped in an Australian flag with a southern cross tattoo and, for some, I still wouldn't be Australian enough," she wrote in the Junkee article.

Ms Faruqi said she was excited to bring "much needed diversity" to Canberra, and hoped her presence would encourage non-white Australians.

"The reality is our federal parliament doesn't look anything like the streets and suburbs of Australia. Slowly but surely things are changing."