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Asian American communities blast Trump for compliciting in the surge in anti-Asian hate crimes

(People's Daily Online)    17:17, May 27, 2020

Ever since the COVID-19 pandemic wreaked havoc on the US, American politicians have been politicalising the lethal virus to justify their incompetence to protect their own people, making irresponsible and racist remarks targeting Asian communities. US President Donald Trump, an advocate to associate the virus with China, compliciting in the surge in an anti-Asian hate crimes.

According to an article titled “Turn back this wave of hate: 100 writers call for an end to anti-Asian hostility" by the Guardian on May 25, reports of hate crimes and violence against the Asian and Asian American community have surged since early in the pandemic, while more than 100 prominent writers, including several top Asian American authors, have called for an end to a surge in anti-Asian hostility in the US which they say has been “egged on” during the pandemic by the Trump administration’s pandering to racist tropes.

Below is an abbreviated version of the original story:

More than 100 prominent writers, including several top Asian American authors, have called for an end to a surge in anti-Asian hostility in the US which they say has been “egged on” during the pandemic by the Trump administration’s pandering to racist tropes.

The joint statement, co-ordinated by Pen America and the Asian American Writers’ Workshop (AAWW), comes at a time when hate crimes, violence and other attacks against Asians and Asian Americans are on the rise in the US. There have been numerous reports since early in the pandemic of Asian Americans being blamed for “bringing the virus” into the country and being told “go back to China”.

The attacks have erupted in college campuses, city subways and online. The FBI has warned local law enforcement across the country that Asian American communities are at risk due to rising hostility during the coronavirus crisis.

Among the more serious attacks that have been chronicled was a stabbing of a Burmese man and his two young children in Midland, Texas, in March. The teenaged assailant told police he had targeted the family because he thought they were Chinese and were spreading coronavirus.

The authors of the joint statement say that “the time to turn back this wave of hate is now. Reports of any individuals being spat on, stabbed, beat up, or verbally assaulted are disturbing enough when they are isolated incidents.”

The statement continues: “When such attacks are collectively driven by hate, in such large volume, the onus lies heavily on civil society and our elected representatives to condemn them.”

The signatories comprise a roll call of top Asian American and other writers. The lead authors include the Vietnamese American writer Viet Thanh Nguyen, whose novel The Sympathizer won the Pulitzer prize for fiction; Ayad Akhtar, an American-born playwright who also won a Pulitzer prize for drama; American novelist Celeste Ng; and the British actor, rapper and performer Riz Ahmed.

Another of the lead authors, the Korean American writer Min Jin Lee, said she hoped the statement would be a “clarion call that all forms of racist hatred, especially at this moment, are unwelcome, unacceptable and intolerable”.

Other prominent writers among the signatories are Dave Eggers, Amitav Ghosh, Salman Rushdie, George Saunders and Alice Sebold.

The joint statement is designed as the start of an engagement by the literary world that will culminate on Wednesday in a virtual day of action convened by Pen America and AAWW. The day will consist of workshops exploring the history of violence and hatred against Asian Americans in the US and poetry readings by 20 poets.

(For the latest China news, Please follow People's Daily on Twitter and Facebook)(Web editor: Hongyu, Bianji)

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