Indian student attacks: Denial of racism will lead to more attacks
Stop
the Attack on Indian Students
Deputy
PM Julia Gillard’s different reactions to two media controversies
say a lot about the denial of racism in Australia. After performers
on the television show Hey
Hey It’s Saturday
did a blackface skit Gillard was insistent that “obviously I think
whatever happened was meant to be humorous and would be taken in that
spirit by most Australiansâ€. However,
Gillard failed to see the humour when the January 5 Delhi Mail
Today
published a cartoon depicting a Ku Klux Klan type figure wearing a
Victorian police badge saying: “We are yet to ascertain the nature
of the crime.â€
The cartoon referred to the January 2
stabbing murder of Indian university graduate Nitin Garg as he walked
to his workplace: a Hungry Jack’s restaurant in Melbourne’s
western suburbs. Gillard reacted furiously and said, “Any
suggestion of that kind is deeply, deeply offensive to the police
officers involved and I would absolutely condemn the making of a
comment like that.†Both comments, and other statements by the
government regarding attacks on Indian students, deny, and
consequently refuse to deal with, the racism that exists in
Australia.
The
government and sections of the media have portrayed the outrage that
has swept India in response to violence against Indians in Australia
as hypocritical. They claim that the international Indian community
is making things worse by reacting to the murder. For instance,
Julia Gillard told media on January 6: “In big cities around the
world we do see acts of violence from time to time; that happens in
Melbourne, it happens in Mumbai, it happens in New York, it happens
in London. Any individual act of violence is obviously to be deeply
regretted and our sympathies go to anyone who is harmed by an act of
violence.â€
But the truth is different. The January 8
Sydney
Morning Herald
reported: “In the 12 months to June 2007, 1082 attacks on Indians
in Victoria were reported to police — an assault rate of 1700 in
every 100,000. Victorian Indians are 2½ times more likely than
non-Indians to be beaten up or knifed.†Victorian police figures
reveal 1447 assaults on Indian students from July 2007 to July 2008,
an increase from 1082 the previous year. Less than a week after
Garg’s murder, on January 8, 29-year-old Jaspreet Singh was
attacked and set on fire by four men in the Melbourne suburb of
Essendon. Fortunately he survived.
Many crimes against
Indian students also go unreported. Some students are afraid that
lodging a formal police report would harm their chances at permanent
residency. Others do no trust the police to take their complaints
seriously. One Indian student told Green
Left Weekly
at a May 31 Melbourne protest by international students against
racist violence that: “As soon as the police hear your accent or
see your skin colour, they dismiss your complaint.†Nineteen
percent of people from a non-English speaking background in Victoria
reported having experienced discrimination in policing at some time,
which is three times the rate for those born in Australia.
The
January 7 SMHsaid:
“The Federation of Indian Students says the real figure [of
violence] is four or five times higher, and increasing.â€
Confronted with evidence that Indian students are victims of crimes
in disproportionate numbers, Australian politicians and media have
attempted to focus on every possible reason except racism. For
example, Indian students who tend to work late and catch public
transport late at night make “soft targetsâ€. Victorian Police
advised Indian students “not to speak loudly in their native
language or display signs of wealth such as iPodsâ€. The fact that
Indian students are told to hide their Indian identity, as well as
their iPods, to avoid being beaten up is a sign that they are being
deliberately targeted for the race. A term even exists for racist
violence against Indians — “curry bashingâ€. But it is not
often asked, why so many Indian students have to take low-paid jobs
and work late at night. Faced with high fees, nearly all
international students have to work and they face discrimination in
finding a job.
The June 15 SMH
reported that having a foreign or indigenous-sounding name gives
people less chance of landing a job in Australia. In a January 6
article in the Melbourne Herald
Sun,
Federation of Indian Students in Australia spokesperson Gautam Gupta
said: “ANU data shows fresh graduates of Indian or Asian
background have 64 per cent less chance of finding permanent
employment in their chosen fieldsâ€. Whether or not Nitin Garg was
murdered specifically because he was Indian is not the major issue.
Social discrimination, rooted in a profit-first system, means it is
more likely that Indian students will be attacked. Of course,
discrimination occurs against nearly all minority groups, not just
Indian students. Racism has been part of White Australia since it
was founded on the genocide and dispossession of Aboriginal
people.After federation in 1901, the first legislation of the new
national parliament was the introduction of legislation barring
non-White migrants.
That this racism continues is shown by
the Australian government’s suspension of the Racial
Discrimination Act in 2007 to attack the rights of Aboriginal people
and the “fortress Australia†anti-refugee policies. If the
government actively discriminates against people, sometimes
violently, is it any wonder that some people on a train at 3am will
do the same? Resistance wants all unfair discriminatory policies
immediately abolished and will continue to fight with the Indian
students in their campaign for justice.
This
article was written by Tim
Dobson 16
January 2010 From: Comment & Analysis, Green Left Weekly issue #
822 20 January 2010.
Police want to speak to the