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Australia says attacks on Indians have hit its reputation

February 09, 2010  |  RSS   |  Tell a friend  |  Printable Version
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Australia says attacks on Indians have hit its reputation
Canberra: Emphasizing that Australia needs to treat its ties with India "like a Test match and work with diligence and dedication", Foreign Minister Stephen Smith admitted on Tuesday that attacks on Indians had "considerably damaged his country's reputation in India and among the Indian people".

"In 2008, I compared Australia's earlier approaches to India to a 20/20 cricket match: short bursts of enthusiasm followed by lengthy periods of inactivity. I said we needed to treat the relationship like a Test match and work with diligence, dedication, application and perseverance day in and day out to extend the partnership," Smith told the Australian Parliament.

"The era of inactivity and even neglect is over," he added, delving on India's growing global role, the strategic relationship between both these countries and the future trajectory of bilateral relations.

Smith stressed that Australia had emerged as a major destination for Indian students studying abroad over the last decade. Enrollment had gone up at an average annual rate of over 40 percent since 2002. Currently there were over 120,000 Indian students.

The minister pointed out that the wave of recent attacks on Indian students and others of Indian origin in Australia had cast a long shadow, not only over educational links but across the broader bilateral agenda.

"These attacks are inexcusable. Australia needs to take this seriously and we are taking it very seriously," he said.

"We also need to accept and understand that it has considerably damaged Australia's reputation in India and among the Indian people. Indeed it has been widely noticed beyond India and South Asia."

There has been a wave of attacks on Indian students since May last year. In two cases, people have died.

Detailing the measures undertaken by Prime Minister Kevin Rudd's government, Smith said law enforcement agencies had brought perpetrators of attacks to justice.

In Victoria state alone, Smith said that 45 people had been arrested for crimes against Indian students or nationals.

"If any of these attacks have been racist in nature - and it seems clear some of them have - they will be punished with the full force of the law," he said.

Following the attacks, Smith acknowledged that repairing the Australian brand and reputation in India was an essential priority.

"Just as Australia and Australians need to recognise the realities of India's evolving society and emergence as a global influence, we have to work harder to convey to India and Indians an appreciation of contemporary Australia," he said. IANS
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