international
Hanson's Socceroos own goal should have been a free kick for Taylor
Key takeaways
- Pauline Hanson has said she is "delighted" monoculturalism is being debated.
- The Player of the Match performance has made the 20-year-old Socceroo, who was just a baby when he emigrated from Tanzania with his family, an Australian household name.
- Irankunda is the kind of example a politician asked about their stance on multiculturalism might have thought to draw upon to illustrate one of the myriad ways that migration can enrich a society.
Why this matters: an international story with cross-border implications worth tracking.
Pauline Hanson has said she is "delighted" monoculturalism is being debated. (ABC News: Adam Kennedy )
Link copied Share Share article As millions of Australians watched World Cup debutante Nestory Irankunda drill the ball into the back of the net last week, few probably considered the thrilling goal as proof of a successful "monoculture".
The Player of the Match performance has made the 20-year-old Socceroo, who was just a baby when he emigrated from Tanzania with his family, an Australian household name.
Article preview — originally published by ABC Australia. Full story at the source.
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