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Expatriate Indians downplay racial attacks in Australia

dontsuspendme

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New Delhi, Jan 10 (IANS): Several Indians living in Australia have condemned the attack last month on an Indian student in that country but described the assault as one of several such stray incidents there.

Kushagra Bhatnagar, a financial analyst based at Greenslopes in the Australian state of Queensland and who was here to attend the 12th Pravasi Bharatiya Divas (PBD) -- the annual gathering of the Indian diaspora that concluded Thursday -- said the attack on 20-year-old Manriajwinder Singh at a park in Melbourne Dec 29 was “very unfortunate”.

He, however, said there might be some stray incidents of racial attacks on Indians in the country but otherwise the country is friendly towards them.

Singh, 20, who is studying for a bachelor of commerce degree at a Melbourne university, is in an induced coma in a hospital in that Australian city after he was viciously attacked by a group of eight boys and a woman.

A friend of his also sustained injuries and Australian police arrested three boys in connection with the attack.

“This kind of incident can happen anywhere in the world ... even in India there are so many such incidents,” Bhatnagar, who is also an active member of the Overseas Friends of BJP in Queensland, told IANS.

“Of course, there are some ill elements in the society who indulge in this kind of ignoble things.”

Bhatnagar said he has been living in Australia since 2008 and prior to that he was in Britain.

“But I found them (Australians) very friendly,” he said.

When asked whether this attack would adversely affect the inflow of students from India, he was of the view that the number of students from India to Australia would not go down, but they would like to go to other places such as Brisbane and Tasmania.

“I don't know the finer details about the attack on Manriajwinder Singh in Melbourne other than what I have read through the media. Trust the police will be able to prosecute the offenders,” said Vinod Daniel, chairman of AusHeritage, an Australia government organisation, who was also here for the PBD.

Originally from Chennai, Daniel graduated from IIT Delhi in 1984 and has been living in Australia since 1995. Prior to that, he was in the US for eight years.

“I have worked and continue to work internationally on projects and have been to over 40 countries. I have found Australia to be one of the most tolerant and safe countries which is very welcoming to any migrant,” he said.

“I have an extensive circle of colleagues and friends from India (in Australia) and they would all agree with me,” Daniel asserted, adding that his two children and wife find Australia “a fantastic place to live in”.

He was of the opinion that such unfortunate incidents can happen in any big city, “whether it be New Delhi or London or Cairo or New York or Melbourne”.

“I am confident that the law enforcement authorities would arrest and prosecute the offenders (in the Manriajwinder Singh case). Most of these isolated incidents are opportunistic crimes rather than racially motivated crimes,” Daniel said.

“I would strongly recommend Australia as a fantastic destination for Indian tourists as well as prospective students.”
Expatriate Indians downplay racial attacks in Australia
 
I completely agree, Australia is probably the best country in the world.

Except the crazy tax. Nobody likes that.
 
One of my friend got attacked and his thumb was cut . He said there are somali goons and some lebanese gang who operates at night .

By the way he was attacked by somalians .
 
I have heard there are a lot of drunk thugs especially at night.

Most of which are South Americans.

You'd better not hand out a lot at night especially on the West Coast .

I completely agree, Australia is probably the best country in the world.

Except the crazy tax. Nobody likes that.

But AU has a very high income per person.

I wouldn't say it's the best in the world though.
 
It's too hot right now in Ozland to beat up anybody, not even their own bishops.
 
Most of which are South Americans.

You'd better not hand out a lot at night especially on the West Coast .



But AU has a very high income per person.

I wouldn't say it's the best in the world though.

It's got like the 6th highest per capita income, in Perth where I live it's even higher.

Quality of life is great, standard of living is great, education etc is great, it's a free society, you are free to practise your religion, crime is very low, low unemployment.

Yeahh lifes good :D
 
I lived in Perth myself for quite sometime a fee years ago. The country was good, people were friendly, and I could complain from anything really.


It's got like the 6th highest per capita income, in Perth where I live it's even higher.

Quality of life is great, standard of living is great, education etc is great, it's a free society, you are free to practise your religion, crime is very low, low unemployment.

Yeahh lifes good :D

Perth has a high population of aboriginal, which means they make a lot of noise.

Unlike here :usflag:
 
I lived in Perth myself for quite sometime a fee years ago. The country was good, people were friendly, and I could complain from anything really.




Perth has a high population of aboriginal, which means they make a lot of noise.

Unlike here :usflag:

Ah you've got a point. God only knows how many times I've been asked for a dollar for the bus.
 
It's got like the 6th highest per capita income, in Perth where I live it's even higher.

Quality of life is great, standard of living is great, education etc is great, it's a free society, you are free to practise your religion, crime is very low, low unemployment.

Yeahh lifes good :D

How well are lawyers doing there ?
 
If you're an expat lawyer, you have a very low chance of getting a job. My sister just came back from her graduation at Uni of California LA and Uni of Western Australia and she barely got a job.

Lawyers need to be accredited to the Australian system.
so,are you the second gen?
 
So Indians aren't instantly killed the second they step off a plane in Australia like the Indian media pretended?

What a surprise. :disagree:
 
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