Discrimination against Bangladesh over GSP, quota, and duty-free access utterly illogical: Muhith   * * *   No Magura-type election, pledges PM   * * *   US Congressman in city to inspect RMG factories   * * *   Sunday’s HSC exams on May 30   * * *   Agartala-Akhaura rail link work to start soon   * * *   Rumour of RMG worker’s death sparks protest in Gazipur   * * *   Brick kilns playing havoc with paddy in Thakurgaon   * * *   Import of 250 MW power: Power Div seeks direct offer from Indian state-owned firms   * * *   AL afraid of Tarique’s popularity: BNP   * * *   18-party calls countrywide hartal for Sunday
<   >
Saturday, 25 May 2013

Australia says attacks on Indians harm Indian ties

PrintDecrease Font SizeIncrease Font Size
Reported by: UNBconnect
Reported on: February 09, 2010 17:48 PM
Reported in: International
CANBERRA, Feb 9 (AP/UNB) - The government is committed to preventing attacks against Indian students studying in Australia, which are harming relations with India and damaging the nation's
reputation, a minister said Tuesday while conceding that some assaults appeared racially motivated.
Foreign Minister Stephen Smith said his government will report to his Indian counterpart, S.M. Krishna, this week on what progress authorities have made concerning the attacks in the southern city of Melbourne.
Indian students staged street marches following the near-fatal stabbing of an Indian student at a party in September, and attention to the issue intensified after a 21-year-old Indian graduate was
stabbed last month.
Smith said police in four states had recently made arrests for violent crimes against Indians, including 45 arrested in Victoria.
"We also need to accept and to understand that it has considerably damaged Australia's reputation in India and among the Indian people; indeed it has been widely noticed beyond India and south Asia," Smith told Parliament.
Australia has been criticized in the Indian media for playing down racism as a motive for the violence. Smith said Tuesday it "seems clear" that some attacks had been racially motivated and
the perpetrators would be punished.
India, Australia's fastest growing export market, has also become the largest supplier of overseas students studying in Australian colleges over the past decade.
Almost half the Indian students live in Melbourne, Australia's second largest city, where most of the recent violence has been reported.
Police maintain that there is no statistical evidence that Indian students are being targeted by violent criminals.
The Indian government has demanded that Australia take action to protect Indians.
Bookmark with

Comments

No Comments on this News

Editor's Picks

Banner
Banner
Banner
Banner