Close X
Thursday, November 14, 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

    Trump's Call To Pharma Firms To Move Back To US Could Hit Indian Exporters

    Foreshadowing "Buy American" moves that could affect the largest market for Indian pharmaceutical companies, US President Donald Trump told drug makers on Monday to bring back manufacturing to the United States.

    Trump's Call To Pharma Firms To Move Back To US Could Hit Indian Exporters

    Indian-Orgin Man Charged With Impersonating US Tax Official

    Indian-Orgin Man Charged With Impersonating US Tax Official
    A 29-year-old Indian-origin man and another person have been charged for allegedly impersonating US tax officials and falsely representing victims from the department to send payments to their bank accounts and debit cards.

    Indian-Orgin Man Charged With Impersonating US Tax Official

    Indian-Origin Vijaygiri Anandgiri Goswami Linked To Pak-Afghan Drug Trade: US Prosecutor Preet Bhara

    Indian-Origin Vijaygiri Anandgiri Goswami Linked To Pak-Afghan Drug Trade: US Prosecutor Preet Bhara
    Vijaygiri Anandgiri Goswami and three others "ran a Kenyan drug trafficking organisation with global ambitions," Bharara said on Tuesday. 

    Indian-Origin Vijaygiri Anandgiri Goswami Linked To Pak-Afghan Drug Trade: US Prosecutor Preet Bhara

    Indian American Realtor Subba Rao Kolla To Run For Virigina Assembly

    Indian American Realtor Subba Rao Kolla To Run For Virigina Assembly
    Kolla, a real estate businessman and a community activist, if elected, will become the first Indian-origin member of the Virginia House of Delegates,

    Indian American Realtor Subba Rao Kolla To Run For Virigina Assembly

    Why UK's Rekha Patel Sold Her Dream Home For 2 Pounds

    Why UK's Rekha Patel Sold Her Dream Home For 2 Pounds
    A 43-year-old Indian-origin teacher in the UK has sold her home, which has a market value of 250,000 pounds, for a token of mere 2 pounds to ensure that she cannot be evicted from the property.

    Why UK's Rekha Patel Sold Her Dream Home For 2 Pounds

    White House Uses Quebec Killings To Defend Own Policies On Muslim-Country Travel

    In the face of protests, lawsuits, internal grumbling, an international backlash and a partial climb-down, the Trump administration invoked Quebec City's mosque attack to defend its travel ban on seven majority-Muslim countries.

    White House Uses Quebec Killings To Defend Own Policies On Muslim-Country Travel