Tuesday, December 23, 2025
ADVT 
International

Hate Crime: Indian American Man In New Jersey Attacked Viciously, Community Calls For Zero Tolerance

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 22 Jul, 2015 11:05 AM
    The Indian community in New Jersey has issued a message of "zero tolerance" in the wake of continuing attacks on people of Indian origin in the neighbourhood, media reported on Wednesday.
     
    Fear gripped the community after an elderly man Rohit Patel was seriously injured in an alleged "bias attack" in broad daylight earlier this month in Brunswick town, reported Sentinel, a weekly community newspaper serving North and South Brunswick.
     
    Patel, 57, was found lying on the road by a passing driver. He sustained serious injuries, including broken teeth, stitches on his mouth and forehead.
     
    Nyle Kilgore, 24, of North Brunswick who assaulted Patel was later taken into custody.
     
    According to Patel's family, he was targeted because he was an Indian.
     
    Middlesex County officials met residents at North Brunswick's municipal building to discuss the aftermath of the incident.
     
    "What has got us together is really a terrible biased crime. It is not acceptable anywhere in the world, but it is especially not acceptable here in our home. It's a home for all of us. We are a community," Mayor Francis "Mac" Womack was quoted as saying.
     
    In a similar case in the past, Divyendu Sinha, 49, was attacked by a group of teenagers as he walked near his home along with his family members in 2010.
     
    "If we firmly believe that we do not have tolerance for this type of bias, we need to spell it out, let those individuals who are intolerant get the message that diversity is the name of this town," the paper quoted a resident as saying.
     
    "If this is not their community, find another community so everyone can live in harmony," he said.
     
    According to councilwoman Shanti Narra, an Indian-origin criminal lawyer in New York City, the stereotypes that Indians are passive, they love gold and they keep jewellery in their homes may be the cause behind these attacks.
     
    The New York and New Jersey areas have a huge population of Indian-origin people.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Iraq continues to mop up IS

    Iraq continues to mop up IS
    Iraqi Kurdish forces who recently liberated Sinjar from the Islamic State (IS) militants, continued its mop-up operations against radical militant group in the flashpoint northwestern Iraqi town....

    Iraq continues to mop up IS

    Pay for Sony hacking losses: US to North Korea

    Pay for Sony hacking losses: US to North Korea
    The US, which had blamed North Korea for a cyber attack on Sony Pictures Entertainment, Monday demanded that the communist country should...

    Pay for Sony hacking losses: US to North Korea

    Indian maid denied salary in Saudi Arabia

    Indian maid denied salary in Saudi Arabia
    An Indian housemaid who has not been paid for six years by her employer in Saudi Arabia is still awaiting her salary in arrears and a final exit home...

    Indian maid denied salary in Saudi Arabia

    1,159 educational institutions soft targets in Islamabad

    1,159 educational institutions soft targets in Islamabad
    Law enforcement agencies have identified 1,159 educational institutes in the Pakistani capital as soft targets for terrorists, the media reported Tuesday....

    1,159 educational institutions soft targets in Islamabad

    Sony hacking: Cyber vandalism or cyber terrorism?

    Sony hacking: Cyber vandalism or cyber terrorism?
    As South Asia was watching the terrible tragedy at Peshawar unfold another drama was coming to head in Hollywood. At the eye of the storm was ‘The Interview’...

    Sony hacking: Cyber vandalism or cyber terrorism?

    Signs of Europa's plumes remain elusive

    Signs of Europa's plumes remain elusive
    A fresh look at data collected by NASA's Cassini spacecraft during its 2001 flyby of Jupiter shows that its moon Europa's tenuous atmosphere is even thinner than previously thought....

    Signs of Europa's plumes remain elusive