Saturday, December 20, 2025
ADVT 
International

Sikhs In Washington Express Concern After Shooting; FBI Joins Probe, India Voices Concern

Darpan News Desk IANS, 06 Mar, 2017 12:57 PM
    The FBI is helping the hunt by the Seattle city police for an attacker who told a Sikh man to "go back to your own country" and shot him -- in the second xenophobic attack on Indians in the past two weeks. India has voiced deep concern and stressed the need to prevent such incidents.
     
    The US State Department has also, on behalf of the Donald Trump administration, expressed condolences and said they are working on the case.
     
    The 39-year-old victim, a US national of Indian origin, was identified by External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj as Deep Rai. He received a bullet injury on his arm in the attack on Friday.
     
    The Indian Embassy in Washington tweeted that Indian envoy Navtej Sarna "conveyed our deep concerns to the US government on recent tragic incidents".
     
    Sarna said that India has "underlined the need to prevent such incidents and protect the Indian community" and the embassy was coordinating with "all agencies concerned to ensure speedy justice". 
     
    The Indian embassy said that the "State Department, on behalf of US government, expressed condolences and assured they are working" on it.
     
    A statement on Sunday from the FBI's Seattle office said the bureau remains "committed to investigating crimes that are potentially hate-motivated", the Seattle Times reported.
     
    Sushma Swaraj had tweeted that she has spoken to Sardar Harpal Singh, the father of the victim.
     
    "He told me that his son had a bullet injury on his arm. He is out of danger and is recovering in a private hospital," she wrote.
     
    Rai was working on his car in front of his house in Kent city on Friday night when the gunman, described as white and who had his face partially covered, opened fire at him and fled, the police said. 
     
     
    "This is a top priority investigation, and we are doing everything possible to identify and arrest the suspect," Kent Police chief Ken Thomas said, adding that the city of about 120,000 should "be vigilant".
     
    Thomas said the gun shot victim has been discharged from the hospital.
     
    The shooting also created fear within the Sikh community with its members called on law enforcement to investigate the racially-motivated attack, the Seattle Times reported.
     
    Jaswinder Singh, of the Gurdwara Sikh Center of Seattle, said the group has received many calls and messages of support since the incident.
     
    "It's kind of scary to hear about things like this, but we definitely have been getting tremendous support from the community," he said.
     
     
    The Sikh Coalition, a national civil rights group, asked local and federal authorities to investigate the shooting in suburban Seattle as a hate crime.
     
    The attack reverberated across the nation, with Mayor de Blasio condemning it from New York.
     
    "As mayor of the city with the nation's largest Indian community, my message is clear: this is your city and this is your country," De Blasio tweeted.
     
     
    Sikh community leader in Washington state, Satwinder Kaur, said: "Everybody who is part of this community needs to be vigilant." 
     
    "It is scary. The community has been shaken up," she said.
     
    The incident comes after Indian engineer Srinivas Kuchibhotla, 32, was shot dead, and his friend Alok Madasani was injured in a shooting incident at a Kansas City bar on February 22.
     
    The shooter, US Navy veteran Adam Purinton, 51, was charged with premeditated murder and two counts of attempted murder.
     
    Authorities are investigating the attack as a hate crime after witnesses said he started yelling racial slurs, including "get out of my country".
     
     
    On Thursday, another Indian, Harnish Patel, 43, who ran Speedee Mart in Lancaster, was shot dead outside his house by an unidentified assailant. 
     
    However, the police have said the killing did not appear to be racially motivated.
     
    Harnish, who originally hailed from Vadodara in Gujarat, was living in the US with his family for over 14 years.
     
    US President Donald Trump had condemned the shooting of Kuchibhotla. He had said America stands united in condemning hate and evil in all its forms.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Sikh-Americans Raise $250,000 For Needy Students In Punjab

    Sikh-Americans Raise $250,000 For Needy Students In Punjab
    According to Manpreet Singh, a board member of Sikh Human Development Foundation (SHDF), 539 scholarships were awarded in 2016.

    Sikh-Americans Raise $250,000 For Needy Students In Punjab

    A Driver Passed Out From A Suspected Drug Overdose And A Child Tries To Wake Him

    A Driver Passed Out From A Suspected Drug Overdose And A Child Tries To Wake Him
    The driver, identified by police as 24-year-old Robert Huggins, was pale and sweaty; he had passed out from an apparent drug overdose, authorities said.

    A Driver Passed Out From A Suspected Drug Overdose And A Child Tries To Wake Him

    Over 2 Lakh Indians Studying In American Universities: Report

    Over 2 Lakh Indians Studying In American Universities: Report
    In its latest report released yesterday, the US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) said, as of November 2016, there were 1.23 million international students with F (academic) or M (vocational) status studying at 8,697 schools in the US.

    Over 2 Lakh Indians Studying In American Universities: Report

    Must Improve 'Important' Relationship With China: Donald Trump

    Must Improve 'Important' Relationship With China: Donald Trump
    President-elect Donald Trump has said the US-China relationship is one of the most important relationships that his administration has to improve, days after he slammed Beijing for currency manipulation and military build up in South China Sea.

    Must Improve 'Important' Relationship With China: Donald Trump

    Indo-US Ties As Strong As Ever Under Barack Obama: US

    Indo-US Ties As Strong As Ever Under Barack Obama: US
    The Indo-US relationship is "as strong as ever" with outgoing President Barack Obama and Prime Minister Narendra Modi having "worked closely" on a wide range of issues, the White House has said.

    Indo-US Ties As Strong As Ever Under Barack Obama: US

    Donald Trump Won't Allow H-1B Visa Holders To Replace US Workers

    Donald Trump Won't Allow H-1B Visa Holders To Replace US Workers
    Trump called these incidents "demeaning" and said: "We are not going to let it happen to our people any more."

    Donald Trump Won't Allow H-1B Visa Holders To Replace US Workers