Aussie gets Jail for hurting Indian

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A court here has sentenced an Australian to over six years in jail for attacking an Indian taxi driver with knife, an incident that led to hundreds of Indian cabbies blocking the Melbourne streets last year.

Justice Elizabeth Curtain sentenced Parrish Chales to six-and-a-half years in jail, saying the stabbing was "random, unprovoked and frenzied" and the fact that the 45-year-old attacker had a hunting knife hidden in his pants showed a degree of "premeditation".

The judge said the unprovoked and unexpected assault on 23-year-old Jalvinder Singh was terrifying and left Singh with ongoing mental and physical injuries that would change his life, media reports said today.

Charles stabbed Singh five times from behind with a hunting knife and the victim crawled bleeding from his cab and was found in the gutter hours later by a passing truck driver in April last year.

Charles drove off in the cab but crashed it nearby. The crime shocked the city and led to a mass blockade of Flinders and Swanston streets in central Melbourne by taxi drivers for 22 hours.

Victorian Government had to then agree to safety screens in cabs for drivers who wanted them, and pre-payment of fares to become mandatory at night. Justice Curtain said that the attacker was diagnosed with HIV positive in 1986 and at the time of the attack he was depressed and unhappy about his treatment at the Alfred Hospital.

Charles claimed to be suffering from blackouts and said he could remember little of the incident. However, in a series of reports from psychiatrists and psychologists to the Supreme Court there was no evidence that Charles was psychotic or suffering from a mental illness that would explain his behaviour.

Charles had previously pleaded guilty to one count of intentionally causing serious injury and one count of theft of a taxi.

Justice Curtain said people like taxi drivers, who work alone at night, need to be protected from violent attacks.

"While he was stabbing me he was holding me from behind around the neck. I was in shock. I felt like I was fighting for my life," Singh had earlier said in a statement.

Justice Curtain set a maximum term of nine-and-a-half years.

source
 
we need to introspect

Although i totally agree that Indians/dark skin people are not well treated abroad and whatever happened with the Indian cab driver was also wrong..i would like to add here that we need to introspect...can we justify why in some parts in our own great country the people from other regions are thrashed badly? This is in reference to what is happening in Maharashtra, where the regionalism is taking a toll and North Indians are beaten on every second day. Or the way people from Eastern states are treated in Northern states, the way people call them Chinkis and make fun of them. How can v raise questions on the way Indians are treated abroad until we introspect and ensure nothing like that happens in our own country..We only have a right to ask questions, when we stop such discrimination inside our geographical boundries
 
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Its a fair deal!!!

Somehow it feels good to hear that the people practicing discrimination are being punished. Maybe the justice doesn't really reach all, but it has to prevail.....
 
Justice meted out

Just single the attack taking all racial issues out of it. Justice has been done. Now racial discrimination is never warranted by any sound organization or group. These criminals are scattered by themselves and bring out their depressions on others. Sometimes the frequency and type gets so similar, that a racist trend is said to occur. The jail term was a good justice, but these can happen anywhere regardless of the country you are in.
 
Discriminations are everywhere in the world. Even when people from other nations come to India, they too face issues like this and this is a hard hitting fact. But in India we have discrimination on the basis of religion, caste and now even region. If there are so much of differences within the nation then how can be define India as "unity in diversity". I think these issues are everywhere; at least their government was decent enough to give fair justice and took preventive measures. Our government is least bother about the discrimination that is prevailing within our own country.
 
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