Close X
Monday, November 18, 2024
ADVT 
National

You Bloody Black Indians: Kerala Man Abused, Assaulted At An Australian Restaurant

Darpan News Desk IANS, 27 Mar, 2017 12:35 PM
    An Indian man, who was assaulted by a group of teenagers at a restaurant in Australia's Hobart city, has said the racial mood is changing in the country and assaults, ethinc slurs are becoming more common.
     
    Li Max Joy, who hails from Kerala and works as a part-time taxi driver, was attacked by a group of five youngsters at McDonald's restaurant in north Hobart on Saturday. They hurled racial abuses like "you bloody black Indians" at him and assaulted him, reported The Mercury newspaper. 
     
    The 33-year-old victim said that the teenagers had been arguing with the McDonald's manager when he reached the restaurant to have coffee, but turned their anger on him when they noticed him.
     
    "They were angry at the McDonald's staff but turned their anger on me in the car park and then inside the store," he said. Joy said he was punched 30 to 40 times.
     
    "Three of those boys punched me in the face and said, 'You bloody black Indian ****, why are you here?'," Li told Australia's SBS television network. 
     
    Joy was admitted to a hospital with serious wounds. He was later discharged and he reported the incident to the police.
     
    He said the increasing racial hostility could stem from "the Donald Trump effect".
     
    "The racial mood is definitely changing. It is continuous now. Many other drivers have been abused but not everyone reports it to the police."
     
    Joy said that he has been living in Hobart for eight years with his family and also narrated another such incident that happened with him a week ago.
     
    "Last week in Glenorchy, I was waiting for a fare when a primary-school aged boy put water in his mouth and then came over to the car window and spat it out on me," Joy said. 
     
    Joy also sent a detailed email to External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj about the incident.
     
    Another taxi driver was assaulted by four men in a racial attack in Hobart in June last year.
     
     
    AUSTRALIAN MISSION EXPRESSES REGRET OVER ATTACK ON INDIAN
     
    The Australian High Commission here on Monday expressed regret over an attack on an Indian national in the state of Tasmania this weekend.
     
    "We regret the attack on a taxi driver of Indian origin in Hobart which occurred over the weekend," the high commission spokesperson said in a statement. 
     
    "We understand he suffered minor injuries and has been discharged from Royal Hobart Hospital," the statement said.
     
    "We place great importance on the safety and security of everyone who resides in Australia, including our Indian community."
     
    Li Max Joy, who hails from Kerala and works as a part-time taxi driver, was attacked by a group of five youngsters at McDonald's restaurant in north Hobart on Saturday. They hurled racial abuses like "you bloody black Indians" at him and assaulted him, reported The Mercury newspaper. 
     
    The 33-year-old victim said that the teenagers had been arguing with the McDonald's manager when he reached the restaurant to have coffee, but turned their anger on him when they noticed him.
     
    "They were angry at the McDonald's staff but turned their anger on me in the car park and then inside the store," he said. Joy said he was punched 30 to 40 times.
     
    "Three of those boys punched me in the face and said, 'You bloody black Indian ****, why are you here'," Li told Australia's SBS television network. 
     
    According to the high commission spokesperson, the matter is current and under investigation by Tasmania Police. 
     
    "Tasmania Police takes all assaults seriously. We understand that whether the assault was racially-based will be a component of the investigative facts," the spokesperson said.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Weather Warnings Issued As Snow Hits B.C.'s South Coast And Vancouver Island

    Weather Warnings Issued As Snow Hits B.C.'s South Coast And Vancouver Island
      Environment Canada issued a weather warning early Monday predicting up to five centimetres of snow for much of the Lower Mainland, as well as southeastern Vancouver Island.

    Weather Warnings Issued As Snow Hits B.C.'s South Coast And Vancouver Island

    'I Delivered Him Myself:' Mom Who Treated Son With Holistic Remedies Testifies

    'I Delivered Him Myself:' Mom Who Treated Son With Holistic Remedies Testifies
    CALGARY — A Calgary woman who treated her son with dandelion tea and oil of oregano before he died says she delivered the boy herself with an unregistered midwife.

    'I Delivered Him Myself:' Mom Who Treated Son With Holistic Remedies Testifies

    Solving The Legacy Of Indigenous Sexual Abuse: Think Globally, Act Nationally

    Solving The Legacy Of Indigenous Sexual Abuse: Think Globally, Act Nationally
    Fred Kejick Thomas remembers the exact day — April 14, 2005 — when he confronted the uncle who had sexually molested him out on a trap line when he was four years old.

    Solving The Legacy Of Indigenous Sexual Abuse: Think Globally, Act Nationally

    Montreal Man Kidnapped In Libya Happy To Be Home After Seven-Week Ordeal

    Montreal Man Kidnapped In Libya Happy To Be Home After Seven-Week Ordeal
    Lying on the ground, surrounded by armed gunmen, he thought, "OK, this is where they're going to kill us, something didn't go right," Poccia recalled.

    Montreal Man Kidnapped In Libya Happy To Be Home After Seven-Week Ordeal

    Four Life Sentences For Man Who Shot Two Former Co-workers, Injured Two Others

    Four Life Sentences For Man Who Shot Two Former Co-workers, Injured Two Others
    NANAIMO, B.C. — A man who fatally shot two former co-workers and injured two others at a sawmill in Nanaimo, B.C., has been handed four life sentences.

    Four Life Sentences For Man Who Shot Two Former Co-workers, Injured Two Others

    Cops Trying To Save Lives With CPR Or Naloxone Won't Be Investigated: Watchdog

    Cops Trying To Save Lives With CPR Or Naloxone Won't Be Investigated: Watchdog
    VANCOUVER — British Columbia's police watchdog will no longer investigate police officers who have provided life-saving measures resulting in someone's death.

    Cops Trying To Save Lives With CPR Or Naloxone Won't Be Investigated: Watchdog