Categorized | Current Affairs, India CA

Indians are PR seekers in Australian universities

Why are there so many Indians in Australia? How do they get there? The Australian government a couple of years ago started granting Permanent Residency (PR) to any and all “students” enrolled in an Australian University. This started the Indian mafia to send as many bodies to Australia as possible. Most of the students are enrolled in spurious courses like Cosmetology, Hair Cutting, Skin Care–all Basket Weaving type of courses. The body of Indians are in Australia for only one purpose–to escape poverty of Bharat (aka India). No other country gives permanent residency to Indians in this manner.

Australian “universities” are complicit in this scam. They want the Dollars and the Indian mafia provides them the Dollars. Earlier waves of Indian immigration was controlled and was made up of businessmen and real students. These students slowly melted into Australian society without a problem.

The Indian press has tried to portray all the Indians in Australi as ’students”. Thousands are illegal and thousands work as cab drivers and do other odd jobs.

The Indian government has urged its media to show restraint when reporting attacks on Indian students in Australia.

As an Indian man recovers in hospital after allegedly being attacked and set alight in Melbourne on Saturday, the Indian foreign ministry warned that the Indian media’s aggressive coverage on recent violence could have a bearing on bilateral relations between the two countries. Foreign Ministry spokesman Vishnu Prakash called on the local media to “exercise utmost restraint.”

The comments followed the second attack on Indians in a week. On Saturday evening Jaspreet Singh claims he was doused with petrol and set alight by a group of four males as he parked his car near his home after a night out with his wife.

The previous weekend, graduate student Nitin Garg was stabbed to death as he walked to work at a fast food restaurant in Melbourne.Mr Garg’s body was flown him today. His death sparked protests in India amid aggressive media reports that alleged the attack was racially motivated.

 

The new wave of “students” are not the Indian elite, they are poor and destitute. They come ot work in Australia while enrolled in the so called “universities”. They live in ghetto type of conditions, and share apartments, sometimes ten to a room. Some of these poor souls sleep in shifts. They work two jobs, and work odd hours.

On Friday the Australian government was forced to defend police after an Indian newspaper published a cartoon depicting a policeman as a member of the Ku Klux Klan.

The cartoon, which shows a person wearing the white robes of the KKK and an Australian police badge, reads: “We are yet to ascertain the nature of the crime.”

The Australian government today welcomed India’s move to temper anger over the attacks, which follow a spate of assaults on indian students in the middle of last year.

“I am very pleased that overnight the government has issued what I believe is a very constructive and responsible advice and that is not to overreact to it, to understand that investigations are being undertaken,” said Simon Crean, the acting Trade Minister.

“We need to get all of the facts first and we shouldn’t overreact until all of the facts are in.”

  • Indo-Aussie spat grows into full fledged war of words
  • Massive backlash against India: Why do Australians hate Indians?
  • http://rupeenews.com/2010/01/10/indians-are-pr-seekers-in-australian-universities/
  • The escalating Indo-Australian race war
  • Australia: Indian racism described by Mbongeni Ngema’s song “AmaNdiya”
  • Melbourne temple blown up in escalating Indo-Australian race war
  • http://www.upiasia.com/Blogosphere/Editor-Rupee-News/20090605/do_australians_hate_indians/
  • http://rupeenews.com/2009/05/29/massive-backlash-against-india-why-do-australians-hate-indians/
  • The sheer number of Indians in Australia has overwhelmed the Australians. They see Indians in rough neighborhoods, more prone to crime and prostitution. The Indian mafia has pumped prostitute, pimps, drug dealers, and anyone who can pay the airfare to Australia. This new mix of fake students have made life miserable for the genuine students by creating racial friction between the Ozzies and the Indians.

    The attacks last year sparked street protests and strained relations between Canberra and Delhi. Australian Prime Minister visited India in November to reassure the Indian government that its students were safe in Australia, as teh growing row threatened Australia’s lucrative education trade with India.

    The number of Indian students in Australia has rocketed in the last few years, since the Australian government offered permanent residency to overseas students enrolled at Australian colleges. PR, as it is commonly known, has spawned a vast overseas education industry worth $15 billion to Australia, $2.3 billion of which comes from India alone.

    Although Australian police have insisted the crimes were not racially motivated, Australia’s High Commissioner to India, Peter Varghese, admitted this week that race might have been a motive for some of the attacks, particularly where the attackers engaged in racial abuse.

    His admission came shortly after the Indian government issued a travel advisory for Indian students travelling to Australia, warning them of an increased risk of assault, especially in Melbourne.

    Mr Crean today reiterated there was no evidence to suggest that the recent attacks were racist.

    “I think it is important in terms of the two most recent events that it is not only the Victorian police saying that there is no evidence in either case that the murder and then the subsequent attack were racially based.

    “I think it is also important in terms of the most recent incident, that a relative of Mr Singh … also doesn’t believe that it was racially based,” he said.

    There is some uncertainty over the incident involving Mr Singh, which Detective Acting Senior Sergeant Neil Smyth described as “a bit strange”.

    He said there was no evidence it was racially motivated.

    A police source told Fairfax Media “there are things that don’t add up in the initial reports”.

    A police spokeswoman said the investigation was ongoing and the first task was always to establish whether a crime had occurred.From Times Online, January 10, 2010

    Indian media told to show restraint after latest assault in Australia, Anne Barrowclough in Sydney

    Let us start our investigation in South Africa, and look at kenya, Uganda and the Caribbean. Mbongeni Ngema is relatively unknown in the Western world and many would wish that he had never sung any songs. He was part of the Chorus in “Circle of Life” (Disney–Lion King). He however is very popular in South Africa and the South African government was forced to “unban” his song about Indian racism in South Africa.Amazon site

    Mbongeni Ngema’s song ‘AmaNdiya’ has elicited a wide range of reactions that are indicative of a polarized and divided society. The outpouring of vitriolic emotions on either side of the Indian-African divide should signal to us the urgent need to address the racial and ethnic divisions that continue to plague our country. Amidst all the accusations and counter accusations of racism, we should not lose sight of the big picture of a democratic non-racial South Africa that we are all striving for. South Africa Human Rights Commission. Comment on Mbongeni Ngema’s “Amandiya”

    Mbongeni Ngema, a Anti-Apartheid hero, a prodigous writer, a marvelous lyricist, a prolific composer and successful director was born in Verulam, KwaZulu-Natal near Durban in South Africa. Ngema started his career as a theatre backing guitarist. Mbongeni Ngema whose achievements on stage have been phenomenal. He wrote a controversial song, Amandiya about racism that Blacks in KwaZulu-Natal have suffered at the hands of Indians. It lyrics depicted the reality that portrayed Indians as racist and exploitative. His Jive Madlokovu album sent shock waves through the Indian community. Ngema has refused to apologize for the song and it remains popular in South Africa.

    You would have thought that since the blacks and the coloured people of South Africa were both at the receiving end of the Apartheid regime, they would share a degree of fellowship as comrades. In practice this was not entirely the case. There were some Indians who did join the black people’s struggle against white racism, but there were others who preferred to serve the Apartheid regime to suppress the black majority.

    In fact, a special category was created for complicit Indians in South Africa’s notorious tricameral parliament, where they had no voting rights but were still considered a notch above the black majority, who continued to be denied the false cover of even that third-rate parliamentary system.

    Offended by the inclination of so many Indians to join Pik Botha’s tricameral parliament a black South African composer wrote a song, which portrayed the country’s Indian population as abusing black people and being more racist than the whites.

    A barrage of criticism led to Mbongeni Ngema’s song AmaNdiya – Zulu for Indians – being banned by South Africa’s radio stations and record shops. But it took a while before Nelson Mandela got Ngema to apologise for the lyrics. This anti-black syndrome is not peculiar to Indians. It affects other South Asian countries too, notably Pakistan.Dawn. A curry by another name By Jawed Naqvi Thursday, 04 Jun, 2009 | 07:58 AM PST

    Of course Indian racism is not limited to South Africa. Things got so bad that Uganda and Kenya expelled all Indians from the country.

    Indian students are ubiquitous on Australian campuses, but they have not assimilated into the Australian way of life. On many occasions they have violated their visa status and have started to permeate the landscape around the campuses in search of menial jobs. 80,000 students on a few dozen campuses makes them highly visible. In a slowing economy, there is a growing tide of Anti-Indian feeling among the Aussies.  Many Australians feel that the Indian complaints are exaggerated and hide the real truth which usually stem from domestic disputes, lewd behaviour, drunkenness or theft of property. The Australian Police does not accept the Indian claim that racism is involved. Some of the female Indian “students” have been caught as prostitutes, and there is the general perception that many of the Indian students sell drugs in Australia. Some Australians have accused the Indians of using Black Magic for seduction purposes. Australian students also accuse the Indians on cheating in exams and whispering answers in Hindi and other languages not understood by Australians.

  • http://rupeenews.com/2010/01/10/indians-are-pr-seekers-in-australian-universities/
  • The escalating Indo-Australian race war
  • Australia: Indian racism described by Mbongeni Ngema’s song “AmaNdiya”
  • Melbourne temple blown up in escalating Indo-Australian race war
  • http://www.upiasia.com/Blogosphere/Editor-Rupee-News/20090605/do_australians_hate_indians/
  • http://rupeenews.com/2009/05/29/massive-backlash-against-india-why-do-australians-hate-indians/
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