Saturday, December 20, 2025
ADVT 
International

FBI To Track Hate Crimes Against Sikhs, Hindus, Arabs In US

Darpan News Desk IANS, 26 Mar, 2015 02:11 PM
    Six US lawmakers along with leading advocacy groups have welcomed the inclusion of Sikh, Hindu, and Arab American communities in the Department of Justice's hate crimes tracking effort.
     
    This is the final step in the long-fought effort to encourage the US federal government to finally begin tracking and quantifying hate crimes against these at-risk communities, the lawmakers said at an event on Capitol Hill Wednesday.
     
    The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) recently updated its hate crimes database and FBI training manual in order to start tracking hate crimes committed against these groups - that system is now fully operational.
     
    Ami Bera, the lone Indian-American member of the US House of Representatives, along with fellow House members Joe Crowley, Bill Pascrell, Mike Honda, Grace Meng and John Garamendi attended the event. These lawmakers led a Congressional effort to encourage the Department of Justice and FBI to document hate crimes against Sikh, Hindu, and Arab Americans.
     
    They spearheaded numerous letters to the DOJ and FBI and introduced a Congressional resolution in the wake of the tragic August 2012 massacre in Oak Creek, Wisconsin, and submitting testimony urging action on hate crimes.
     
    In 2011, two elderly Sikh Americans, Gurmej Atwal and Surinder Singh, were shot and killed while out for a walk in Elk Grove, California, a part of Bera's constituency, in a suspected hate crime that is still unsolved.
     
    "Since the September 11th attacks, too many Americans, especially Sikh, Hindu and Arab-Americans, have been wrongfully subjected to hate crimes and discrimination, including the shooting of two Sikh Americans in my own city," Bera said.
     
    "Religious tolerance is a fundamental value of our nation and we must do everything we can to prevent these crimes motivated by bias against a victim's religious beliefs," he said.
     
     
    "Until now, Anti-Sikh hate crimes were not recognized by the FBI," said Rajdeep Singh, Director of Law and Policy at the Sikh Coalition.
     
    "Year after year, Sikh Americans were being targeted for harassment and violence because of their distinct identity.
     
    "For the first time, the FBI now officially acknowledges that Sikhs are targeted for being Sikhs. While refinements are needed to the agency's tracking system and training standards, we are making progress," he said.
     
    "The federal tracking of anti-Hindu, anti-Sikh, and anti-Arab hate crimes is an important, if long-overdue, development. Even as our community grows, Hindu Americans remain uniquely vulnerable to harassment, bullying, and violence," said Harsh Voruganti, Associate Director of Public Policy, Hindu American Foundation.
     
    The updated FBI manual "marks a step towards ensuring accurate reporting of hate crimes committed against Sikhs, an important step that will ultimately aid the Sikh community as we continue to address the roots of anti-Sikh bias," said Jasjit Singh, executive director of the Sikh American Legal Defense and Education Fund (SALDEF).
     
    Update of FBI hate crimes training manual to include Arab, Hindu, and Sikh categories "is more important now than ever with the recent spike in hate violence targeting our communities," said Lakshmi Sridaran, Director of Policy and Advocacy, South Asian Americans Standing Together (SAALT).
     
    "Our work ahead will be to ensure our communities are informed of these critical updates and are able to build trust with law enforcement so that hate crimes targeting South Asians, Muslims, Sikhs, Hindus, Middle Easterners, and Arabs are appropriately documented and prosecuted," she said.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Indian-American Renu Khator to lead Dallas Fed board

    Indian-American Renu Khator to lead Dallas Fed board
    India born Renu Khator, University of Houston(UH) president and UH System chancellor, is set to lead the board of directors for the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas....

    Indian-American Renu Khator to lead Dallas Fed board

    Lessons to learn from Sino-Indian border management: Chinese daily

    Lessons to learn from Sino-Indian border management: Chinese daily
    The lessons learnt from China-India land border dispute management can help settle the maritime dispute between China and Japan and the disputes in the South...

    Lessons to learn from Sino-Indian border management: Chinese daily

    US urges India to look beyond IPR in affordable healthcare

    US urges India to look beyond IPR in affordable healthcare
    India was Tuesday urged by the US to look beyond intellectual property rights (IPR) and compulsory licensing in affordable healthcare, and to address concerns...

    US urges India to look beyond IPR in affordable healthcare

    India, Nepal ink 10 deals; Modi inaugurates trauma centre, bus service

    India, Nepal ink 10 deals; Modi inaugurates trauma centre, bus service
    Nepal's happiness "gives us joy", Prime Minister Narendra Modi said here Tuesday on his second visit to the Himalayan country in 100 days as both sides inked...

    India, Nepal ink 10 deals; Modi inaugurates trauma centre, bus service

    China ready to hold fresh border talks with India

    China ready to hold fresh border talks with India
    China welcomes India's newly-appointed special representative on border talks, Ajit Doval, and expects a new round of parleys soon, a foreign ministry spokeswoman said Tuesday....

    China ready to hold fresh border talks with India

    IS, militant groups received $120 mn in ransoms: UN

    IS, militant groups received $120 mn in ransoms: UN
    The Sunni radical group Islamic State (IS) and other terrorist groups operating in Syria and Iraq have received as much as $120 million in ransoms since 2004, a UN expert said....

    IS, militant groups received $120 mn in ransoms: UN