Friday 3rd of May 2024

disturbing, offensive & gross .....

disturbing, offensive & gross .....

The Ministry of External Affairs on Saturday summoned the Australian High Commissioner over the racist email scandal involving top Victorian police officers joking about an Indian train passenger's electrocution.

In a shocking incident, top Australian police officers were caught in a racist e-mail scandal joking about the electrocution of an Indian train passenger and suggesting that it could be "a way to fix the Indian student problem" in Melbourne.

The police officers of the Australian state of Victoria circulated sickening video footage showing the death of the man, who was travelling on the roof of a crowded train in India, The Herald Sun reported today.

When the train stopped at a station the man stood up and touched an overhead power cable. Onlookers screamed as he was electrocuted, showed the clip contained in one of the offending e-mails.

The e-mail containing the shocking video began circulating in the Victoria Police computer system and racist comments were added, suggesting "this might be a way to fix the Indian student problem".

The paper said it has discovered some of the force's highest-ranked officers have been implicated in the scandal, which also involves pornographic material.

Three superintendents were nabbed during an investigation into the circulation of inappropriate e-mails through the police computer system and several inspectors have also been caught, the report said.

E-mails probed by the Ethical Standards Department's (ESD's) Operation Barrot contain pornographic, homophobic, racist and violent material.

Reacting to the scandal, Chief Commissioner Simon Overland described the e-mails as "disturbing, offensive and gross".

India summons Oz envoy over racist emails by cops

 

media sports .....

Australia and New Zealand have a reputation as welcoming countries - as the thousands of Britons who migrate Down Under each year could attest. But the countries' relationship with another source of skilled migrants - India - is becoming less friendly by the day.

Accusations of racism towards Indians have recently been thrown around in Australia and New Zealand even while their athletes compete in the Commonwealth Games in Delhi.

Only this week in Australia, details emerged of an email that has been circulated among police in the state of Victoria. It contained footage of an Indian man on top of a train being electrocuted by overhead wires and was accompanied by a comment suggesting it could be a way to "fix" the Indian student "problem". As many as 15 officers face disciplinary charges related to the email.

The affair has reopened a row that last boiled over in January after a string of attacks on Indians across Australia culminated in the killing of Nitin Garg, a 21-year-old accountancy student, in Melbourne, the state capital of Victoria.

The Indian media were outraged by the treatment of their citizens Down Under and decried Australia as a racist country that refused to protect Indians who had moved there to further themselves. Australia's reaction to India's coverage, which included a cartoon depicting an Australian police officer as a member of the Ku Klux Klan, was typically blunt.

Members of the Australian government attacked the Indian media and the secretary of Victoria's Police Association, Greg Davies, observed: "Cartoons in Australia are normally done by people who are either clever or witty and this one's neither."

Tensions continue to simmer in Melbourne and as the Sydney Morning Herald reported earlier in the year: "Being Indian in Melbourne in 2010 is not the most comfortable of situations."

Over in New Zealand, well-known TV host Paul Henry was forced to resign at the weekend after an interview with prime minister John Key, in which he questioned whether Governor-General Sir Anand Satyanand, who is of Indian-Fijian heritage, could really be a Kiwi.

He asked whether Sir Anand was "even a New Zealander" and urged an uncomfortable-looking Key to ensure that his successor would "look and sound like a New Zealander".

Perhaps worse was Henry's mocking of Delhi chief minister Sheila Dikshit, which also sparked a diplomatic incident. During a feature about preparations for the Commonwealth

Games he deliberately mispronounced the name. Despite being told it was pronounced Dix-it, he giggled away for over a minute - at one point calling her dip-shit - as his mortified co-presenters shuffled awkwardly.