Advertisement
Advertisement
Coronavirus pandemic
Get more with myNEWS
A personalised news feed of stories that matter to you
Learn more
Peng Wang teaches financial management at the University of Southampton. He suffered face and arm injuries after being beaten by four men while jogging near his home. Photo: Shutterstock

‘Chinese virus, get out!’: lecturer from China beaten in Britain amid spike in hate crimes

  • Peng Wang, who teaches at the University of Southampton, suffered face and arm injuries after being beaten by four men while jogging near his home
  • Reports of race crime against people of East Asian appearance in Britain have soared in the past year

Warning: graphic content follows

A Chinese university lecturer in Britain was viciously attacked last week, renewing fears of violent anti-Asian racism in the country amid the coronavirus pandemic.

Peng Wang, who teaches financial management at the University of Southampton, was attacked in broad daylight by four white men aged between 20 and 25 while jogging just minutes from his home last Tuesday.

“Some crazy guys shouted at me from their car on the other side of the road,” the 37-year-old lecturer said. “They said ‘Chinese virus’, get out [of] this country, f*** you.”

Wang said he yelled back at the men, who drove away but then circled back and attacked him. The assault left him with a bloody nose and bruises to his face and arm.

In addition to facial injuries, lecturer Peng Wang was also left with bruises on his arm after the attack. Photo: Handout

Bystanders called for an ambulance and contacted police. A 21-year-old suspect was arrested and later released while investigations continue.

The incident has reinforced fears within the local Chinese community that Covid-19-related racial hate crime against people of Chinese heritage is on the rise in Britain.

Lecturer Peng Wang suffered a bloody nose and bruises to his face after he was attacked in the British city of Southampton last week. Photo: Handout

In March last year, soon after Covid-19 arrived in Britain, Singaporean student Jonathan Mok was attacked on London’s Oxford Street. A 16-year-old boy was sentenced to 18 months of rehabilitation service for the racially motivated assault.

Reports of race crime against people of East Asian appearance in Britain have soared in the past year. Between January and June 2020, there were 457 police reports of racially motivated crime against people who self-identified as Chinese.

Hate crime charges added in New York Chinatown stabbing case

“It’s definitely getting worse, since Brexit and then with the pandemic and people have got intolerant and angry, ” said Wang, who is originally from Tianjin in northeast China, and moved to Southampton in 2014 after completing a doctorate in Finland.

“When I first came to the UK I would go jogging in the night and had no worry of these things.”

In support of the lecturer, activists from the Southampton Stand Up to Racism campaign and the Chinese Association of Southampton held an online solidarity meeting on Monday night attended by around 300 people.

Community groups are also being trained to offer support and advice for Chinese victims of Covid-19-related attacks.

A University of Southampton spokesperson said: “The university is extremely concerned by this appalling and unprovoked attack on a respected member of our academic community. Our colleague is receiving support from the university and we will continue to liaise closely with the police.

“We would urge all of our students and staff to come forward and report any racist incident they witness or personally experience with the confidence that it will be investigated and appropriate actions taken, including the involvement of the police if necessary.”

With diplomatic relations between Beijing and London also deteriorating over the National Security Law in Hong Kong and other issues, many Chinese people in Britain worry they could be targeted.

“The fact that the tensions that came out of Donald Trump’s government and subsequently with China and the way they painted [the coronavirus] as a ‘Chinese virus’ has not helped in the UK,” said Jackson Ng, a barrister of Chinese descent and a Conservative town councillor in Buckinghamshire, northwest of London.

02:41

Hate crimes targeting Asian-Americans in California reflect rise in many US states

Hate crimes targeting Asian-Americans in California reflect rise in many US states

He felt he had also been a victim of racial discrimination because of online accusations that he was working for the Chinese government.

“In such a globalised world, what happens in America has an impact here. People don’t distinguish. They associate a Chinese person wrongly as being representative of the Chinese Communist Party.”

Ng was born in Amsterdam, in the Netherlands. His parents came from Singapore and Indonesia.

To move or not to move? Life in the UK with the BN(O) visa

“There has always been racism in the UK but what has happened over the last 12 to 15 months, with the rhetoric by certain governments and then the situation in the UK where people are getting stressed out because they have been made redundant or have children not going to school, there is a multiplier effect. It’s not right, it’s wrong, and this kind of stuff needs to be called out.”

03:15

New York’s Chinatown on edge after Asian man stabbed in back

New York’s Chinatown on edge after Asian man stabbed in back

Ng sought and received a statement from British Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab last month in support of victims of this type of racism, noting the expected influx of British National (Overseas) passport holders from Hong Kong after London offered them a path to citizenship.

Responding to Ng’s question at a recent Conservatives for Chinese online event, Raab said: “I would always stand up and say that we have got no time for conspiracy theories and we stand with all our black, Asian and ethnic minority communities and I think particularly during Covid[-19], our Chinese communities”

“There is growing concern there isn’t enough support available for immigrants from Hong Kong, especially those moving to cities like Liverpool and Manchester,” Ng told the South China Morning Post, adding that it was important newcomers were helped to become involved in British society to avoid “community cohesion problems in the future”.

Editor’s note: this story has been updated with a statement from the University of Southampton.

174