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After a man was allegedly punched and abused at Westfield, fears rise over anti-Indian racism

“We should tackle immigration [policy], definitely, but please don’t point at the immigrants,” she said.

The number of incidents witnessed by Sydney’s diaspora community over the past three to six months “has been more than the last few years put together”, said Pawan Luthra, the Sydney publisher of diaspora newspaper Indian Link, who has been following anti-Indian racism for years.

“Largely, it started with online trolling,” he said. “What’s disturbing is it’s now moved on to physical violence to people who are of Indian origin.”

In January, video emerged of Indian cricket fans in Melbourne being met with “Where’s your visa?” chants at the Boxing Day Test, and in September, an Indian man reported being spat on and verbally abused by four teenagers on a train from Blacktown to Redfern.

In October, Indian pop megastar Diljit Dosanjh complained about racist comments he received when arriving in Australia for his world tour.

Anti-immigration rallies escalate tensions

The Scanlon Foundation’s report cited the targeting of Indian Australians during anti-immigration March for Australia rallies in August as an example of racism.

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In remarks made in the aftermath of the rallies, Senator Jacinta Nampijinpa Price falsely claimed Labor was bringing in Indian migrants to bolster its vote, before retracting the statement.

The incident strained the Coalition’s reputation and caused Liberal MP Alex Hawke to warn his colleagues against the “ongoing public demonisation” of the Indian community.

Virk, the former Greenway candidate, shared with this masthead comments on her Facebook page that use racial slurs, call for her to be deported to India, mock her accent, and blame Indians for cost-of-living issues – comments she had previously ignored.

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“Now I think it was my mistake to ignore them. It’s come to a point where we can’t take it any more, ‘we’ being people of any origin who have chosen Australia to be home,” she said.

“I think people should start reporting. We should stop and curb this movement now … We need to very carefully use words.”

Khushaal Vyas, a lawyer on the board of Multicultural NSW, said making racist comments about Indians is “not even being edgy any more”.

The diaspora’s concern about Price’s comments was less about how hurtful they were, Vyas said, but that they normalised the rhetoric that led to further vilification: “If they’re saying this on a national stage, of course we can say what we want,” he summarised.

Amar Singh, the NSW Local Hero in the 2023 Australian of the Year and founder of charity Turbans 4 Australia, reported an incident he experienced while travelling in Melbourne, when a man walked up to him on a CBD street and told him to “f— off to your country” before running away.

“I’ve lived in Australia close to three decades. I’ve never seen so much hate in our society for one ethnic group,” Singh said. “It is really bad.”

The Sydney Morning Herald has opened a bureau in the heart of Parramatta. Email parramatta@smh.com.au with news tips.

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