Close X
Monday, December 2, 2024
ADVT 
International

Indian-Americans pay a price for running convenience stores

Darpan News Desk IANS, 01 Sep, 2014 07:35 AM
    Back in 2006, Joe Biden, then a Senate candidate ran into trouble for a remark that "you cannot go to a 7-Eleven or a Dunkin' Donuts unless you have a slight Indian accent."
     
    Gaffe-prone Biden got away by explaining that it wasn't a racial slur but "was meant as a compliment" for the "vibrant Indian-American community" making "a significant contribution to the national economy as well."
     
    A spin or not, Biden who went on become vice president in 2008, was speaking a home truth as according to the Asian-American Convenience Store Owners Association its 50,000 members own over 80,000 convenience stores.
     
    That's more than half the US convenience store count of 151,282 as of Dec 31, 2013. These small retail businesses provide the public a convenient location to buy daily necessities (predominantly food and gasoline) and services. There is one convenience store for an average of every 2,100 residents all over the US with non-fuel sales of $205 billion, according to National Association of Convenience Stores.
     
    Then there are what have come to be known as Potels or motels owned by Patels from India's Gujarat state in practically every single small town of America.
     
    The Asian American Hotel Owners Association (AAHOA) is currently headed by Pratik Patel. It claims its 12,500 members, largely Indian-American, own more than 20,000 properties making up more than 40 percent of all hotels in the US.
     
    They employ nearly 600,000 workers, accounting for over $9.4 billion in payroll annually.
     
    But this very ubiquitous presence of Indian-owned convenience store often makes them the target of attacks as it happened in Ferguson, a small pre-dominantly black town in Missouri which erupted into violent protests after a White policeman shot dead an unarmed black teenager on Aug 9.
     
    Police released a controversial hazy surveillance video implying that the slain teen Michael Brown had robbed a Patel-run convenience store in the days or hours before the incident, but later acknowledged that the alleged robbery had nothing to do with the shooting incident.
     
    The Ferguson Market, where Brown allegedly grabbed a handful of cigars before his deadly encounter with police, looters twice targeted the store owned by a Patel family along with several other Asian-American owned stores, according to the Daily Beast.
     
    At least eight stores were looted in nearby Dellwood too with Pakistani American Mumtaz Lalani's Dellwood Market among those ransacked and almost burnt down by dozens of looters, according to South Asian Times.
     
    Jay Kanzler, the Patels' lawyer, told the Beast he believed that law enforcement authorities allowed the looting of Ferguson Market in part because it is a minority-owned small business.
     
    However, local Asian-American business owners cited by the Beast said they don't think looters targeted them because of their race.
     
    Robberies appear to be an occupational hazard for those running a convenience store.
     
    According to the non-profit research think tank Center for Problem-Oriented Policing (POP Center), convenience store robberies account for approximately 6 percent of all robberies known to the police.
     
    Convenience store employees suffer from high rates of workplace homicide, second only to taxicab drivers, it says citing FBI data. Victims include Indian students taking up overnight jobs at gas stations to pay for their studies.
     
    Just a couple of days before Brown was killed, Rajinder Kumar, 49, an Indian-American convenience store clerk at an Exxon gas station in Hanover, Maryland, was shot in cold blood by a masked man.
     
    Meanwhile, as hundreds rallied Saturday in Ferguson for slain Michael Brown with a pledge to continue national discourse about police tactics and race many of the businesses' windows remain boarded up, though most have reopened, according to local media reports.
     
    But while "Ferguson has held in relief issues related to systemic racism in America... the plight of Asian American store owners is left out of the conversations between the white and black America," as the ethnic South Asia Times put it.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Jackie Chan says he's ashamed over son's drug arrest, apologizes to public

    Jackie Chan says he's ashamed over son's drug arrest, apologizes to public
    BEIJING, China - Action star Jackie Chan says he's ashamed and saddened over his son's arrest on drug charges and has apologized to the public....

    Jackie Chan says he's ashamed over son's drug arrest, apologizes to public

    US looks forward to welcoming Modi

    US looks forward to welcoming Modi
    The US has reiterated that it looks forward to welcoming Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi despite an online petition seeking cancellation of his visit....

    US looks forward to welcoming Modi

    Cleric asks supporters to lay siege to Pakistani parliament

    Cleric asks supporters to lay siege to Pakistani parliament
    A religious leader leading anti-government protesters in Pakistan's capital city Wednesday ordered them to lay siege to parliament, even as he called for...

    Cleric asks supporters to lay siege to Pakistani parliament

    111-year-old Japanese retired educator who enjoys poetry recognized as the world's oldest man

    111-year-old Japanese retired educator who enjoys poetry recognized as the world's oldest man
    TOKYO - A 111-year-old retired Japanese educator who enjoys poetry has been recognized as the world's oldest living man....

    111-year-old Japanese retired educator who enjoys poetry recognized as the world's oldest man

    Latest wildfire near Yosemite calms after early scares, some evacuees start to return

    Latest wildfire near Yosemite calms after early scares, some evacuees start to return
    OAKHURST, Calif. - A wildfire that gave a scare to a community near Yosemite National Park after whose early surges has been tamed by firefighters, and some...

    Latest wildfire near Yosemite calms after early scares, some evacuees start to return

    Flooding forces dramatic rescues in Phoenix area after heavy rains pummel state, close roads

    Flooding forces dramatic rescues in Phoenix area after heavy rains pummel state, close roads
    PHOENIX - Workers at a farm saw hundreds of cactuses sweep away in a flood. Drivers on Arizona's main north-south freeway watched in shock as muddy waters...

    Flooding forces dramatic rescues in Phoenix area after heavy rains pummel state, close roads