Racial Attack: Indian restaurant owner bashed in Ballarat

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Restaurant owner Sumeet Anand was bashed in an unprovoked attack on Monday night.

Ballarat – In an unprovoked racial attack in Ballarat, an Indian restaurant owner has been bashed as two thugs beat him unconscious outside a bottle shop on the corner of Mair and Humffray streets at about 10.30pm on Monday night.

He was left with his left eye bloodshot, yellowed and weeping furiously, his forehead a mass of bruises, with several cuts to his mouth and nose, his knees and back scratched and scabbed.

This was the first time he had ever faced after 35 years of living in Australia.

For Mr Anand, one racial assault is one too many and the 43-year-old restaurant owner is making a stand after his wife Mandeep and 10-year-old son Yash were forced to bear witness as two thugs beat him unconscious outside a bottle shop on the corner of Mair and Humffray streets at about 10.30pm.

sumeet anand family
FRIGHTENED: Sumeet Anand with his 10-year-old son Yash Anand (left) and wife Mandeep Kaur Swaich (right) in their home. Picture: Lachlan Bence.

“Me, my wife and my son went to Humffray Street after finishing work,” Mr Anand said.

“I told her to stop the car and I’ll go grab a couple of beers (from the bottle shop) and by the time I opened the car, out of nowhere these two guys came running and they started bashing me and saying things like ‘go back to your own f****** country, you don’t belong here, you took our jobs’.”

“He was lying on the road – they kept bashing him,” Mandeep added.

“They treated him like he was an animal, they said you go back to your country, f****** black Indians.

“My son was crying, he was shocked.”

Mr Anand said the attack had rattled his family to its core, with ramifications felt on many levels.

Mr Anand elected not to name his restaurant, fearing the incident will tarnish its reputation, but when asked when he could return to work, he answered: “you know, I am shaky at the moment”.

“Maybe they (authorities) need to try to punish (the offenders), or maybe they don’t punish, they help (educate).

“It’s happened to me, and it’s going to happen to another person – another Indian, or another person.

“That’s why somebody has to make a stand, you can’t sit and wait.”

A statement from Victoria Police said the investigation was ongoing, with two men believed to be responsible for the assault.

Mr Anand’s wife said the two assailants bolted from the scene shortly after the attack, with two bystanders coming to their aid.

Originally from New Delhi, Mr Anand said equality is crucial to a well functioning community.

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