Dastyari personally offended by Dutton

Labor frontbencher Sam Dastyari is personally offended by Peter Dutton's refugee comments, saying he couldn't speak English when he arrived in Australia.

Labor Senator Sam Dastyari

Labor frontbencher Sam Dastyari says he's personally offended by Peter Dutton's refugee comments. (AAP)

Iranian-born Labor frontbencher Sam Dastyari says he's personally offended by Peter Dutton's comments on refugees.

The immigration minister has been slammed on Wednesday for claiming "illiterate and innumerate" refugees would swamp welfare queues and take the jobs of locals if the annual humanitarian intake was substantially increased.

Senator Dastyari said as an immigrant, he was personally offended by the slur.

His parents had created countless jobs through small businesses.

"When I came to this country as a five-year-old towards the end of the Iran/Iraq war I could not speak a word of English," he told Sky News.

"This is a country that should pride itself on what migrants have been able to achieve."

Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull brushed aside calls for Mr Dutton's head, praising him as an outstanding minister and noting there had been no successful people-smuggling operations in 600 days.

He acknowledged many refugees came from shattered parts of the world, some had no English skills and were illiterate in their own language through no fault of their own.

Cabinet minister Arthur Sinodinos also defended Mr Dutton's "robust" language but acknowledged Senator Dastyari had "every right to be annoyed".

"I didn't learn English until I went to school because we only spoke Greek at home," he said.

Senator Dastyari said the minister should have been pulled into line but that the prime minister wasn't prepared to stand up to the right-wing "tin foil brigade" within his party.


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Source: AAP

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