International Business

Three Indians attacked in Australia

After a brief lull in attacks on Indians in Australia, three members of the community were "brutally bashed" by a group of around 70 youths, including women, who were attending a birthday party in a bar here after making racist remarks against the trio. - Australia plans to set up student advisory body - Crisis fallout: nations will be more cautious, govt debt swells - Energy giants agree to develop huge Australian LNG project - Wipro vies for bigger Aussie innings; plans to double local hires - Australia bags three new deals worth $70 bn to export gas to Asia - Bhoruka to invest $54 mn to set up edible oil unit in Aus 26-year-old Sukhdip Singh, who arrived here a month ago on a spouse visa, his brother Gurdeep Singh and uncle Mukhtair Singh were attacked by the group when they were playing pool in a bar in Epping suburb on Saturday. "At around 11"o clock my brother-in-law Sukhdip was playing pool along with his family members when they were attacked by around 70 locals who were attending a party," the victim"s relative Onkar Singh said. "They were quietly playing and were trying to avoid trouble even after these locals were trying to provoke them by passing comments," he said. The group started telling them to go back to their country. "When they reached the car park to leave the place a huge crowd attacked them and started bashing them brutally. The attackers were in their teens and around twenties," he said. When contacted, a Victoria Police spokesperson said that before the incident took place, a woman made a racist remark to a group of four males playing pool at Legends Bar. "A short time later, the pool-playing group decided to leave the venue. It is believed they were followed into the car park by up to four males who were part of a larger group celebrating a birthday in the function room," the spokesperson said. It has been alleged the Indians were set upon and seriously assaulted by a group of Australians. Police attended and arrested four males who were taken to Epping police station and interviewed in relation to assault and affray. All the four have been released pending further investigations. While police were on scene, they observed about 15 males and females, also from the larger group celebrating the birthday, made racist comments and one female from the group threw water on a bystander. After police removed the victims from the scene, the larger group continued with their threatening behaviour and racist remarks. However, Onkar claimed police have informed him that six of the 70 attackers have been arrested. The attacks come a month after Australian government assured External Affairs Minister S M Krishna, during his visit here, that Indian students will be protected. Around 30 Indian students were attacked in various cities from June to August.


Add your comment:
Name:
Site address: http://
Your message:
Enter today\\\\'s date, 2 digits
(spam protection):

News of the day
V V: Rediscovering the history of India
Christopher Hill (1912-2003), the brilliant British Marxist historian, reminded us that history and politics were two sides of the same coin. Which meant that historians were primarily interested in ideas not only because they influence societies but also because they reveal the societies that give rise to them. It also means that since politics is always in a state of flux, history had to be rewritten in every generation because, although the past doesn’t change, the present does; each generation asks questions of the past and finds new areas of sympathy as it relives different aspects of the experiences of its predecessors. Some such motivation has given rise to the recent crop of “revised” Indian histories from Ramachandra Guha’s India After Gandhi, Sunil Khilani’s The Idea of India and Nandan Nilekani’s Imagining India. And now we have Meghnad Desai’s The Rediscovery of India (Allen Lane/Penguin Books, Rs 699) that traverses the same passage of India from colonialism to a modern state.
Popular Articles

ArcelorMittal buys 13.8% in Czech arm
The world"s largest steel maker, ArcelorMittal, today said it would acquire additional 13.8 per cent stake in its Czech arm ArcelorMittal Ostrava for $404.3 million (around Rs 1,900 crore).

Now, Nabard to cover micro entrepreneurs, artisans
The National Bank for Agriculture and Rural Development (Nabard), has extended its financing scheme through Joint Liability Groups (JLGs ) to the non-farm sector, to cover the micro entrepreneurs and artisans among others. The scheme was earlier available to small and marginal farmers and tenant farmers and small farmers cultivating land without possessing proper title of their land.