Europe Numerous articles which are related to
racism in Europe cite the use of the phrase and its variations in many European countries. In 2009, a nurse who worked in a Södertälje Hospital in
Sweden complained to management about the way the staff treated patients who had immigrant backgrounds, citing examples of verbal harassment such as "go back to
Arabia". The nurse lost his job. In 2008,
Greenlanders were forced to flee
Gellerupparken after having been subjected to racist persecution from Arab and Somali residents for years. Chants like "Fuck home to Greenland, this is our Gellerup" was reported as being common, along with being shot at with fireworks by Arab youth. On 28 January 2020,
André Ventura, leader of the Portuguese political party
Chega, provoked an outcry in Parliament by saying that black Joacine Katar Moreira, a Guinea-Bissau-born Assembly member who wanted museum items from Portugal's former colonies to be returned, should be "sent back to her country of origin. It would be a lot better for everyone".
Africa The phrase was used during the
2015 South African xenophobic riots, in which immigrants—including African expatriates from other African countries—were blamed for the high unemployment rate of
South Africans. The
Los Angeles Times said that South Africa's high unemployment rate has been the catalyst for violent attacks in South Africa against migrants from
India,
Pakistan,
Bangladesh, and African countries who are blamed for "stealing jobs and undercutting small businesses owned by South Africans". There was a wave of xenophobic killings in South Africa in 2008, in which 62 people were killed.
Asia In
Malaysia, parliament members sometimes told politicians of
Chinese descent to "balik Cina" (go back to China), especially if they are members of
DAP.
Oceania In 2015,
New Zealand First member of parliament
Ron Mark told National MP
Melissa Lee to "go back to Korea" in parliament. In September 2022,
One Nation senator
Pauline Hanson tweeted that Greens senator
Mehreen Faruqi should "piss off back to Pakistan" after Faruqi called for an Australian republic in response to the death of
Elizabeth II, whom Faruqi also referred to posthumously as "the leader of a racist empire built on stolen lives, land and wealth of colonised peoples."
Israel/Palestine conflict The phrase "Jews/Israelis go back to Europe/Poland" had been widely used in anti-Israel
protests during the
Gaza war, and to lesser degree before that in other places. Jo-Ann Mort of
The Guardian pointed out the irony in the phrase, as the majority of the Jewish population in Israel were born in Israel. In addition, Israeli
Mizrahi Jews of
MENA descent outnumber Israeli
Ashkenazi Jews of European descent. She (and
Seth Greenland of the
LA Times) also point out a further irony - that most of the Jews who actually came from Europe to the
Land of Israel did it in order to flee severe persecution in Europe, where they were long regarded as the non-European
other. Rusi Jaspal said that these statements are meant to deny the historical Jewish connection to Israel. ==See also==