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Spike in violent attacks against Asian Americans sounds alarm in US

This image shows New York City mayoral candidate Andrew Yang speaking to the media as he visits Chinatown on March 05, 2021 in New York City after hearing from workers and residents about hate crimes and acts of violence against the Asian community. (Photo by AFP)

A spike in violent attacks targeting Asian Americans in the United States has prompted the minority group to raise the alarm.

Andrew Yang warned on Friday of the rise in violence against the Asian American community, noting that many Asian Americans feel "more at risk".

Yang, who is running as New York City mayoral candidate, said the increase in anti-Asian violence must be taken "very, very seriously".

A US report on Friday cited Chinatown storeowner Kenneth Lam in Oakland, California as saying that a group of three suspects recently tried to rob his store in Renaissance Plaza, nearly killing him in the attempt.

“They tried to kill me. They literally said that and used their car to try to run me over,” Lam said

A disturbingly graphic and shocking video from Oakland's Chinatown last month showed a 91-year-old man senselessly pushed to the ground, putting the community on high alert.

Also in January, a local television station in the Anza Vista neighborhood of San Francisco showed footage of a young man sprinting toward, then violently shoving to the ground, a man identified as Vicha Ratanapakdee, 84, who had been out for a morning walk . He later died.

Ratanapakdee had moved to San Francisco from Thailand four years ago to help his daughter and son-in-law take care of their two sons.

Numerous incidents of this kind, targeting Asian Americans business owners and elderly Asians, began following former US president Donald Trump's racist rhetoric and repeated rebuke of China and other Asian countries.

The attacks quickly reinvigorated simmering outrage and fear over a wave of anti-Asian violence and harassment that community leaders say was spurred earlier in the coronavirus pandemic by the rhetoric of Trump, who insisted on calling the coronavirus “the China virus” or the “Kung Flu.”

Carl Chan, president of the Oakland Chinatown Chamber of Commerce, has tallied more than 20 assaults in past weeks in Oakland’s Chinatown alone.

He said many more attacks are not reported because people fear being targeted again and because it can take hours for the police to arrive at the scene of crime.

The administration of US President Joe Biden appears to be pursuing the same policy against China as his predecessor, making allegations against Beijing’s purported “expansionist” intentions in East and Southeast Asia and siding with China’s rivals in territorial disputes.

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken described the Asian superpower as "the biggest geopolitical test".

Relations with Beijing “will be competitive when it should be, collaborative when it can be, and adversarial when it must be,” adding that the United States is "ready to confront China wherever necessary," Blinken said.

Blinken's remarks resonated with comments by the US spy chief accusing China of preparing for "an open-ended period of confrontation with the US".

Director of National Intelligence John Ratcliffe described China in December as "the greatest threat to democracy and freedom worldwide since World War II.”


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