Saturday, June 1, 2024
ADVT 
International

Pakistani Boy, 7, Beaten, Bullied On US Schoolbus 'Because He's Muslim'

Darpan News Desk IANS, 13 Oct, 2016 01:27 PM
    A 7-year-old Pakistani-origin boy was allegedly beaten up by five classmates on a school bus in the US for being a Muslim, an incident that has forced his family to move back to Pakistan fearing "Donald Trump's America".
     
    The parents of Abdul Usmani have alleged that he was bullied and beaten by five students on the bus while returning home from Weatherstone Elementary School in Cary, North Carolina, as they made references to Muslims and the boy's Pakistani heritage.
     
    "Welcome to the United States of America of Donald Trump," Zeeshan-ul-hassan Usmani captioned a Facebook photo showing his son, Abdul, with his left arm in a sling.
     
    "He is in grade 1, bullied and beaten by his own classmates in school bus for being a Muslim," Mr Usmani said.
     

    Mr Usmani told BuzzFeed News that he his wife along with their three sons have left the US for Pakistan after this latest incident in a long history of discrimination towards his children and family.
     
    "These are six and seven year old kids calling him names, with one kid punching him in the face, while two other kids attacked him, kicked him, and held his arms back," Mr Usmani said.
     
    He described his son "as American as you can get".
     
    "They keep beating him all the way from school to home on the bus," Mr Usmani said of the boy's ride home last Friday.
     
    Abdul, his father said, is traumatised by the attack and has a sprained arm.
     
    Lisa Luten, a spokesperson for the Wake County Public School System, was quoted as saying that the principal of the school immediately began investigating the alleged incident after the family told them about it.
     
     
    "(The principal) interviewed seven students sitting near this child, and none of the students, nor the bus driver, witnessed any type of altercation or incident," Lisa Luten said, adding that the principal has one more child to interview and has not been able to get in contact with the Usmani family since Friday.
     
    Mr Usmani, 38, first came to the US as a Fulbright Scholar from Pakistan and currently works as a Chief Technology Officer of a Silicon Valley data software company.
     
    Usmani said his family was harassed by a neighbour for months because of their religion, and that his other son has been called a terrorist.
     
    "Times are changing and it's not the America we always thought of and believed in. It's not the America that I studied in," Mr Usmani said.
     
    "If Trump wins, America will be great again, but a great that nobody will care about," he said.
     
    Mr Usmani said the irony of the alleged discrimination is he has been working to combat the effects of terrorism and has worked with the UN's Special Envoy for Global Education on a safe school initiative in Pakistan.
     
    Mr Usmani said his family will stay in Pakistan until after the election to see if Trump is elected to determine if his family feels safe enough to return.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Russia Welcomes Surgical Strikes, Asks Pakistan To Stop Terror Activities

    Russia Welcomes Surgical Strikes, Asks Pakistan To Stop Terror Activities
      Russia's Ambassador to New Delhi Alexander M Kadakin also said his country had always been with India in fighting cross-border terrorism.

    Russia Welcomes Surgical Strikes, Asks Pakistan To Stop Terror Activities

    Indian-Origin South African Teen Wins USD 50,000 Scholarship At Google Science Fair

    Indian-Origin South African Teen Wins USD 50,000 Scholarship At Google Science Fair
    Nirghin's discovery has huge financial implications for agriculture, as her creation could retail at USD 30 to USD 60 per metric tonne, as compared to the USD 2,000 plus costs of SAPs.

    Indian-Origin South African Teen Wins USD 50,000 Scholarship At Google Science Fair

    Woman Charged In Canadian Law Professor's Killing; Has Ties To His Ex

    Woman Charged In Canadian Law Professor's Killing; Has Ties To His Ex
    TALLAHASSEE, Fla. — Police have made a third arrest in the 2014 killing of a Canadian law professor in Florida, a woman with ties both to the family of the victim's ex-wife and one of the alleged shooters.

    Woman Charged In Canadian Law Professor's Killing; Has Ties To His Ex

    Indian designer collections showcased at Eiffel Tower

    Indian designer collections showcased at Eiffel Tower
    The Fashion Week will send a strong message to the global media and industry through fashion.

    Indian designer collections showcased at Eiffel Tower

    Chinese Man Kills Parents, Murders 17 Neighbours To Cover Up Crime

    Chinese Man Kills Parents, Murders 17 Neighbours To Cover Up Crime
    After returning to his hometown on Wednesday, Yang Qingpei killed his parents 'in a rage' after they refused to pay his debts.

    Chinese Man Kills Parents, Murders 17 Neighbours To Cover Up Crime

    'I Had To:' Why A Man In Pakistan Killed His Sister

    'I Had To:' Why A Man In Pakistan Killed His Sister
    For two months, over the thunder of machines at the steel mill, the men taunted Mubeen Rajhu about his sister. Even now, they laugh at how easy it was to make him lose his temper.

    'I Had To:' Why A Man In Pakistan Killed His Sister