Close X
Sunday, November 24, 2024
ADVT 
International

Hate Crime: Sikhs In US 'Intimidated, Harassed' At Alarming Rate

Darpan News Desk, 31 Mar, 2017 12:20 PM
    Sikhs in the US are reporting an increase in violent threats and harassment against the community amid rising incidents of hate crimes against Indian Americans in the country.
     
    Chairman of the Sikhs Political Action Committee (SikhsPAC), Gurinder Singh Khalsa, said so far there have been two death threats and two reports of vandalism against Sikhs in the state of Indiana, TheIndyChannel.com, an ABC Television Network affiliate, reported on Thursday.
     
    One incident included a direct threat against a Sikh from a man carrying a handgun in Fishers city, according to the report.
     
     
    "Somebody showed him the gun and asked him: ‘Who are you? What country do you belong to?'"
     
    Khalsa said there have been other incidents too where Sikhs were threatened.
     
    Sikh-American physician Amandeep Singh said he was directly threatened last week with a text message and doesn't understand why this is happening to Sikhs around the nation.
     
    Singh said he felt a range of emotions after the threats, including fear for his family and his patients.
     
     
    "Fear, especially if you have family, kids, the safety of your family and kids, that comes to mind first," said Amandeep. "Then you try to make sense of it."
     
    "I believe I've been living here 14 years and never experienced anything like that specifically," Singh said. 
     
    "My job is serving the people you know, everyday I'm there for the people and taking a stand with them and serving the community. It was hard for me to comprehend even something like that coming to somebody's mind."
     
     
    SikhsPAC has contacted the US Attorney General's Office and is working with law enforcement. The threats were under investigation.
     
    Indiana is one of only five states in the US without a hate crime law, said the report.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Pakistan Denies Identity Papers To Family Of Doctor Who Helped Trace Osama Bin Laden

    Pakistan Denies Identity Papers To Family Of Doctor Who Helped Trace Osama Bin Laden
    Pakistan has denied identity cards to the family of Shakeel Afridi, the jailed doctor believed to have helped the CIA hunt down Osama bin Laden in 2011, blocking college enrollment for his children, their lawyer said on Friday.

    Pakistan Denies Identity Papers To Family Of Doctor Who Helped Trace Osama Bin Laden

    After Trump, Now Kuwait Bans 5 Muslim-Majority Countries, Including Pakistan

    After Trump, Now Kuwait Bans 5 Muslim-Majority Countries, Including Pakistan
    Kuwait has suspended the issuance of visas for nationals of Syria, Iraq, Pakistan, Afghanistan and Iran.

    After Trump, Now Kuwait Bans 5 Muslim-Majority Countries, Including Pakistan

    Hillary Clinton's New Book To Include 2016 US Election Experience

    Hillary Clinton's New Book To Include 2016 US Election Experience
      "These are the words I live by," said Ms Clinton, who will use them to tell stories from her life, up to and including her experiences in the 2016 presidential campaign.

    Hillary Clinton's New Book To Include 2016 US Election Experience

    Indian-American Leaders Launch Effort Against President Trump's Immigration Ban

    The lawmakers - Pramila Jayapal and Raja Krishnamoorthi - joined by former Obama Administration official and top Indian-American leaders urged the community to stand united and fight jointly against these executive orders.

    Indian-American Leaders Launch Effort Against President Trump's Immigration Ban

    Sri Lankan Man Arrested For Predicting President Maithripala Sirisena's Death

    Sri Lankan Man Arrested For Predicting President Maithripala Sirisena's Death
    A former Sri Lankan sailor, who had attacked the then Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi with a rifle butt in Colombo in 1987, has been arrested for "predicting" the death of President Maithripala Sirisena.

    Sri Lankan Man Arrested For Predicting President Maithripala Sirisena's Death

    Quebec City's Outspoken Talk-Radio Hosts Face Backlash After Mosque Shooting

    Quebec City's Outspoken Talk-Radio Hosts Face Backlash After Mosque Shooting
    MONTREAL — In the soul-searching that has followed Sunday's deadly mass shooting at a Quebec City mosque, the city's controversial talk-radio hosts are facing a backlash for allegedly fanning the flames of Islamophobia and intolerance. 

    Quebec City's Outspoken Talk-Radio Hosts Face Backlash After Mosque Shooting