2007–2008 crime statistics There were 120,913 Indian students enrolled to undertake an Australian qualification in 2009. In the year 2007–2008, 1,447 Indians had been victims of crime including assaults and robberies in the state of Victoria in Australia. However, the statistics reportedly show that Indians were not over represented in assaults. In either case, the Victorian police refused to release the data for public scrutiny, the stated reason being that it was "problematic: as well as 'subjective and open to interpretation'".
April 2008 Indian taxi driver protest On 29 April 2008, in Melbourne an estimated five hundred Indian taxi drivers protested at
Flinders Street station with a sit-in protest following the stabbing of a taxi driver. A similar protest was held on 19 May 2008 in Adelaide, where about fifty taxi drivers protested after an assault on an Indian taxi driver. The Victorian Government brought in mandatory safety shields later that year, but this was met with protests because of the costs.
May 2009 Indian student protests After incidents in May 2009, over 4,000 Indian students staged a protest opposite
Federation Square in Melbourne on 31 May 2009, saying attacks on Indian students were motivated by racism and were not being sufficiently addressed by the Australian Government. One report said "Along with more police protection, the students also want a multicultural police section, and on-site accommodation for Indian students at all universities and colleges". 18 protesters were detained. On 31 May 2009, In Melbourne India's High Commissioner, Sujatha Singh, met with Victorian State Premier
John Brumby to express her government's concerns over the violence. On 1 June 2009, Indian Prime Minister
Manmohan Singh phoned Prime Minister
Kevin Rudd to express his concerns. On 1 June 2009, in
New Delhi, roughly 100 people including members of the Indian political party
Shiv Sena and student protesters held a demonstration outside the Australian High Commission in New Delhi, where effigies of Kevin Rudd were burnt. Shiv Sena MP
Manohar Joshi warned that Australians living or travelling in India could face revenge attacks if Indians living in Australia continued to be attacked. On the same day Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd expressed regret for the attacks and declared that the perpetrators would be brought to justice. He did not state whether he considers the attacks to be racially motivated. The left-wing
All India Students Federation conducted a candle march at the
India Gate, and demanded "stringent action against those behind the brutal attacks on the innocent students". In June 2009, Indian student organisations called on the Indian government to declare Australia an "unsafe destination for Indian students"., the
National Students Union of India met the Minister of State of External Affairs,
Shashi Tharoor and demanded that the centre should prevail upon the Australian government to ensure that such incidents do not occur again and the
Vishwa Hindu Parishad political party, said it would consider an Australian boycott over the bashings if authorities did not do more to protect Hindus in Australia. On 7 to 10 June 2009, rallies in the
Sydney CBD and at
Harris Park, were attended by hundreds of Indians and supporters. The rally started at
Sydney Town Hall and marched to
Hyde Park. Some attending the rally specifically mentioned Harris Park (a Sydney suburb where 20% of the population is Indian), as an area where Indians were frequently assaulted, and called on police to do more to make that suburb safe. The students said they were considered "soft targets". Some Indian protestors were reported to be carrying hockey sticks and baseball bats. According to police, the protest was sparked by an attack on Indians earlier in the evening allegedly by Lebanese men. In retaliation the protesters attacked three uninvolved Lebanese men, who sustained minor injuries. This was believed to be the first violent reaction by Indian students against attacks on them.
January 2010 murders and protests The murders of 25-year-old fruit picker Ranjodh Singh on 29 December 2009 in
Griffith, New South Wales and 21-year-old student Nitin Garg on 3 January 2010 in Melbourne resulted in a protest in New Delhi. Three Indian nationals were put on trial for the murder of Singh in April 2011, with police alleging that the murder related to a pay dispute. Garg was stabbed by a 15-year-old male during a robbery in a city park. On 5 January 2010, a cartoon depicting the Victoria Police as a
Ku Klux Klan member was published in the New Delhi
Mail Today This was condemned by Acting Prime Minister
Julia Gillard who described it as "deeply offensive". In January 2010 the Indian Government issued a travel advisory for Indians in Melbourne, warning of the increasing crime rate "often accompanied by verbal abuse and fueled by drugs and alcohol". However,
Simon Crean, the acting Foreign Minister, urged Indian leaders to "avoid fuelling hysteria" and stated that Melbourne was a safe place to visit. On 9 January, Indian national Jaspreet Singh made false reports to Victorian Police alleging he was doused in fuel and set on fire in a racially motivated attack in Melbourne. Singh pleaded guilty in May 2010 to criminal damage with intent to gain through arson, attempting to obtain property by deception and making a false report to police. Singh was handed an 8-month suspended sentence. On 26 January 2010, the Australian Prime Minister's nephew
Van Thanh Rudd and Sam King, both of the Revolutionary Socialist Party, dressed up as members of the
Ku Klux Klan, protesting against the allegedly racist violence against Indians during the
Australian Open tennis tournament in Melbourne, with the signs "Racism – Made in Australia" on the front of their dresses. The protest took place in front of
Melbourne Park and both reportedly fined for "inciting a riot". On 24 February 2010, the Vindaloo against Violence protest saw 17,000 protesters at over 400 restaurants, workplaces, schools and universities "reached out to the Indian community, and all our immigrant communities, to let them know that they are not indifferent to violence and that they are welcome and entitled to feel safe here. showed the government and law enforcement that we feel seriously about this issue and want to understand why this violence is happening and what is being done to diffuse it. The official participation of Victoria Police and Premier Brumby in the day's action illustrates that this message has been received."
November 2010 stabbing Another student was stabbed in the bowel on 5 November 2010 in Melbourne. He required emergency surgery in the hospital with 26 stitches. Police reported that they believed the attack to have been random, rather than racially motivated. ==Other Reactions ==