Thursday, November 12, 2009

Racialist attacks in Australia

This needs a special mention on our blog, Mr. Sharma! A case of: “ we just don’t like you…..your smarts, ability to work hard and probably get ahead in Australia!”...Viraj

UGLY and Way Out of Hand.......A Scar on the Aussie Image.
When Indian students arrive in Australia, probably the last thing they think they will end up doing is taking to the streets in a series of boisterous protests.

First, they were voicing anger over a spate of muggings and attacks in Melbourne, Sydney and Adelaide. Police confirm there have been 97 attacks since late-May, although the true figure is probably much higher since many assaults go unreported.

Now, the ranks of disgruntled Indian students have been swelled by those who believe they are being ripped off by a private system keen to take their money, but unable to offer value for money or even a proper education.

Twin demands of protection from attacks, and safeguards from unscrupulous private education providers are now motivating what has fast become a student movement.
And it has drawn multiracial support not only from Australian students but also from Chinese and other nationalities too.

For the Australian government it is a particularly sensitive issue.
Australia is an educational powerhouse, with 70,000 Indian students alone.
After coal and iron ore, it is the country’s third most lucrative industry, worth around 7.5 billion pounds ($14.35 billion AUD).

It was the beauty of Sydney that drew Sumit Purdani from Delhi to study for an MBA, but he will remember his time here for the ugliness of the welcome.
Less than a month after arriving Sumit was set upon by a gang of three youths of Middle Eastern descent while he was on his way to a Hindu temple in broad daylight.
He was punched and kicked in an attack that lasted 10-15 minutes. His attackers only ran off when a local football team, who had just finished a match, came into view.
I asked him how he could be sure he was attacked because of his nationality.
There was no doubt, he said, “because of the comments they made, because I was carrying a bag with an Indian logo and because of the comments they made of my country and background.”

‘Curry diplomacy’
Back in India — a country determined to assert itself much more forcefully on the international stage, and unwilling to sit back while its citizens experience trouble abroad — the Indian student attacks have received extensive coverage on both cable news channels and special programmes devoted to the issue.
“So what will it take to get Mr Kevin Rudd to finally wake up?” asked one commentator, reproachfully.
Alert to the diplomatic, as well as the economic, fall-out from the controversy, Prime Minister Rudd spoke to Indian reporters, and tried to convey his respect and admiration for a country which Australia has traditionally tended to ignore.

“Our Indian community has been such a vital contributor to our culture, to our life, to our food, to our music,” he said. He even opted for some curry diplomacy:
Since Mr. Rudd made those comments, in the midst of the southern winter, the debate has moved on.

Lack of equipment
The assaults against Indian students have received less attention than concerns over the quality of education being offered.

These concerns were crystallised following the closure of Sterling College in Sydney, a private education college offering vocational qualifications which went into administration in late July.
Sterling College shut its door on 500 mainly overseas students, all of whom had spent thousands of dollars in tuition fees. The controversy brought to the fore the issue of financial mismanagement in this lucrative sector, and substandard courses.
I spoke to former lecturers at Sterling College who complained about not being given even the most rudimentary teaching tools, like overhead projectors, hand-outs and textbooks.

Global ambitions
With student interest from India already showing signs of trailing off, it has also mounted a diplomatic offensive.
The Australian Deputy Prime Minister, Julia Gillard, visited India this month. Mr. Rudd plans to make his own visit before Christmas.
At a protest march in Sydney this month, the Australian authorities might have been unnerved by the presence of so many camera crews from China, another lucrative market in the overseas student industry.

Australia is often stereotyped as an unusually racist country, partly because its White Australia immigration policy lasted until the early 1970s. But perhaps the bigger story of the post-war years is how a mono-cultural society became a successfully multi-cultural society, without much of a backlash.
Geographically and diplomatically, it is well placed to have an enhanced international role in what is likely to be an Asia-dominated century. But alienating students from the emerging giants of India and China could impede its global ambitions.

Oz varsities fear slump in number of Indian students

In the wake of a series of attacks on Indian students, universities here are fearing that it could take years to restore the Australia’s reputation in India, with the families of Indian students instead preferring the U.S. and U.K., which they perceive to be safer destinations.
Victorian universities are fearing major decline in the number of Indian students’ enrolment by 50 per cent for next year, the The Age newspaper reported.
The drop has been due to the existing students who were planning to quit their courses here and over hundreds who were expected to shift to universities in other nations, the paper said.
Of the 4,65,000 foreign students in Australia 90,000 have been from India.
The report quoted La Trobe University’s international office acting director, Abizer Merchant, who said Indian student enrolment for next year was set to halve to 300 following a dramatic drop in enquiries and applications since the attacks in May and June.
“What’s aggravated the situation is the Indian media making it sound like racism rather than opportunistic crimes,” Mr. Merchant said. “A lot of Indian parents are now willing to pay USD 10,000 or more extra to send their children to the U.K. or the U.S. rather than Australia,” Mr. Merchant said, adding “Australia needs to rebuild its brand in India, but it’s going to take years.”
La Trobe has nearly 1,200 Indian students on campus.

However, he said a drop in Indian students would not affect the university’s finances because a surge in Chinese student enrolments was expected to cover the shortfall.
Australian Catholic University’s John Cameron said Indian student applications for next year were down 45 per cent nationally and 31 per cent in Victoria.

Other universities in Victoria also predicted declining trends including RMIT that reported a slight drop, Swinburne University also has predicted its Indian student population will also drop whereas Victoria University experienced a 25 per cent drop.

Ballarat University’s Wayne Robinson said safety fears among Indian students and their parents had resulted in an 18.1 per cent drop in enrolments between this year’s first and second semesters.
“Universities and the Federal Government have a lot of work to do to reassure not just India but every country that Australia is a wonderful place to come for university education,” he said.

— © BBC News/Distributed by the New York Times Syndicate


If it was a one or two off incident, it could be ignored. But, it has now been going on for over a year.

It is advisable that Indian students give Australia a wide berth for educational purposes.

Australia has always been a racialist country. Habits die hard is evident in the way the Australian cricketer behave with players from Asian countries.

Presently, it is plain jealousy that is the cause of the attacks on Indians.

How can these coloured b...ds do better than us?

Let me tell the world.

Yes, we Indians are going to rule the world.

We have risen so much, inspite of the corruption existing in all walks of life.

Once Swami Ramdeo eradicates these corrupt politicians, you just watch where India goes.

The tremors are already being felt with action being taken by the government on corrupt politicians, the first time in the history of India after independence.
Koda being the latest example and the Income Tax department conducting more frequent raids on corrupt officials.

With an honest Prime Minister who does not have to depend upon the support of dishonest ministers like Lalu Yadav abd Sibu Soren and the threat of Swami Ramdeo to prod him on, you can expect more fire-works.

1 comment:

Unknown said...

The attacks on Indian students have been unprovoked and have been condemmed by every right thinking citizen in Australia. Australians in general are quite happy with the Indian pouplation as they intergrate well, do not cause trouble and are well mannered and behaved.
The attacks have been done by some misguided Australians who think Indians are somehow linked to the muslim fanatics which has seen their rise recently in Australia. Secondly there are middle eastern gangs that prey on Indians as they perceive them being easy targets. I am glad that the Indians protested and that sent shockwaves all the way to Canberra.
Rest assured, an further attacks are being dealt harshly by the Australian authorities.