&w=3840&q=100)
Australia, Ireland and beyond: Are attacks on Indians abroad on the rise?
Data shows there has been a rise in incidents of hate-related attacks on Indians, notably on students, abroad. Representational image/AFP
On July 19, an Indian man was brutally attacked by a mob in Ireland's Dublin, leaving him dripping in blood from his head to toe. On the very same day, in Australia's Adelaide, a 23-year-old Indian was brutally beaten after being ambushed by five men following a dispute over a parking spot.
The two incidents occurred thousands of kilometres away, but has the same theme — hatred against Indians on foreign soil. In fact, data reveals that such attacks on Indians are rising in recent times.
STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD
We take a closer look at how a rising number of Indians are becoming victims of attacks; in some extreme cases, the incidents are even fatal.
Indians attacked in Dublin
On July 19, a married father of one, who had left his wife and child in India to take up a job in Dublin just weeks before, was brutally assaulted, robbed and stripped of some of his clothes in Tallaght, a suburb in the Irish capital.
The attack by a gang of teenagers came after they had falsely accused the man of acting inappropriately around children. These claims were later spread online, including by prominent far-right and anti-immigrant accounts, said a report by The Irish Times.
However, the Irish police, Garda, said there is no truth to accusations the man was acting inappropriately.
A friend of the man, who was attacked, told The Irish Times that it all began when he had set off on foot to the Vinayaka Hindu temple in Kingswood, following a Google Maps route on July 19. While walking through Kilnamanagh, he was approached by a group of teenagers who started taunting him and asking why he was in Ireland.
'He tried explaining he'd been hired by a tech company to fill a skills gap here in Ireland. And then they hit him badly on the head. For 10 to 12 seconds he didn't know where he was and then he realised blood was oozing from his forehead.'
Following the attack, the group stripped him of his pants, leaving him to wander in a dazed state through the residential area. 'He was trying to take cover and seek help; he was so ashamed. A couple of cars passed him and one man hurled abuse at him. There's a video of that.'
STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD
Local resident, Jennifer Murray, who was travelling on the same route, spotted him bloodied, and gave him a blanket, waiting with him for an ambulance to arrive.
An emotional Murray broke down while recounting the incident, saying the man kept thanking her repeatedly.
However, while this incident has garnered a lot of attention, it isn't the only one that has occurred in Dublin. Another Indian, Vikram Jain, an Irish citizen for some years now, recounted how his tenant had also been attacked by a gang. The young man, who is studying for a master's degree at Dublin Business School, arrived back at Jain's home with a broken nose.
The student was walking through Sean Walsh Park in Tallaght about 6 pm when, he said, he was approached by a group of teenagers. 'They started hurling verbal abuse at him and then they punched him in the face and all over his body,' Jain told The Irish Times.
STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD
Indian student thrashed in Adelaide
Notably, at the same time when the 40-year-old Indian was being beaten up in Dublin, a 23-year-old was assaulted in Adelaide following what he described as a dispute over parking and alleged racist remarks.
The incident took place on Saturday night on Kintore Avenue. The man involved in the attack, identified as Charanpreet Singh, who is in the Australian city for his education, said it all unfolded when a group approached his vehicle, hurled racial slurs and then repeatedly punched him to the ground.
Twenty-three-year-old Charanpreet Singh in hospital after being attacked in Adelaide, Australia. Image Courtesy: SBS/X
'They just said 'f**k off, Indian', and after that they just started punching,' Singh told 9News from his hospital bed. 'I tried to fight back, but they beat me until I was unconscious.'
He sustained severe injuries, including brain trauma and multiple facial fractures. He was rushed to the hospital, where he remained under medical care overnight. The following day, the South Australia Police arrested a 20-year-old man from Enfield and charged him with assault causing harm. However, the rest of the attackers are yet to be identified. Police have appealed for public assistance in tracking them down.
The assault has sparked outrage among Adelaide's Indian community and raised concerns about the safety of international students and immigrants in Australia.
STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD
Prior to this, in October 2022, a 28-year-old, pursuing his PhD from in mechanical engineering from the University of New South Wales in Sydney, Australia, was brutally attacked with a knife and allegedly stabbed 11 times. The student, identified as Shubham Garg, was reportedly attacked in a racial attack.
Indians assaulted on foreign soil
The two recent incidents of Indians being attacked aren't one-off incidents; it's part of a growing pattern across the world.
Data from the Ministry of External Affairs (MEA) reveals that a total of 91 Indian students have been attacked abroad in the past five years. Moreover, data reveals that in the past five years, 30 students have lost their lives in such attacks.
As per the numbers, there were 40 violent attacks on Indian students in 2024, 28 in 2023, four in 2022, two in 2021 and three in 2020.
According to the data provided by the MEA, Canada accounted for the highest number of cases, reporting 27 violent attacks, of which 16 were fatal. Russia recorded 15 incidents with no reported deaths.
Until April 2025, a total of 91 Indian students have been attacked abroad since 2020. Representational image/AFP
The United Kingdom and Germany followed with 12 and 11 cases, respectively, with one death reported in each country. The United States saw nine violent attacks — all of which resulted in the deaths of Indian students.
STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD
Additionally, one fatal case each was reported from China and Kyrgyzstan. Ireland, the Philippines, Italy and Iran reported four, three, three, and one case respectively, none of which led to fatalities. Australia recorded four incidents, including one death.
The MEA has also separately issued figures for attacks on Indians overseas. Eighty-six Indians were attacked in 2023 — with the most cases being reported in the US (12), the UK (10), Saudi Arabia (10) and Canada (10). This is an increase from 57 in 2022 and 29 in 2021.
Separately, an RTI filed by activist Dr Vivek Pandey last year revealed that up to 28,458 Indians have died abroad in the past three years. According to the reply, 24,278 Indians died of natural causes, 1,622 in accidents, 686 due to occupational hazards, 1,736 from suicide, and 136 from violence and murder. 'Some of which [deaths] pertain to Indian students,' Praveen Kumar Munjal, Chief Public Information Officer, MEA stated.
STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD
It's left to be seen what comes next — but officials note that more needs to be done to ensure that Indians are safe abroad.
With inputs from agencies
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Hindu
an hour ago
- The Hindu
Family of Jaipur man abducted in Mali seeks PM's intervention to secure release
The family of a cement industry consultant from Jaipur, who was abducted last month in West African country Mali, on Monday (August 4, 2025) sought the intervention of Prime Minister Narendra Modi and External Affairs Minister S. Jaishankar to secure his release. The family, struggling with uncertainty, has not received any information on his whereabouts so far. Prakash Chandra Joshi, 61, was among the three Indian nationals abducted in the Kayes region of Mali during an armed assault by suspected terrorists affiliated with Jamaat Nusrat al-Islam wal-Muslimeen (JNIM), a group linked to Al-Qaeda, on July 1. The incident occurred at Diamond Cement Factory, which Mr. Joshi had joined as general manager on June 5. Mr. Joshi's daughter, Chitra Joshi, said at a press conference here that though the family had approached the Ministry of External Affairs, Indian Embassy in Mali's capital Bamako and other authorities, it had not received any 'convincing response'. 'We have no information about his location or the demands of the abductors,' she said. 'The factory officials initially informed us about the attack on July 1. Since then, we have not been told anything about ransom or negotiations by the factory, the Embassy, or the MEA,' Ms. Joshi said. The two other abducted persons belong to Telangana and Odisha. Ms. Joshi demanded that the Union government update the three families regularly about the situation and be in communication with them. 'We remain completely in the dark about any concrete action... With every day that goes by, our anxiety and helplessness are growing,' she said. Accompanied by her mother Suman, Ms. Joshi also highlighted the humanitarian concern, saying her father needed regular medicines in view of his health condition and was a strict vegetarian. She said Mr. Joshi had worked earlier in the Middle East and Africa for several years, but had no inkling that foreign nationals could be targeted in Mali's internal armed conflict. The family has since approached the Members of Parliament from Rajasthan and the State authorities seeking their intervention in the matter. Jaipur Rural MP Rao Rajendra Singh, who helped the family and guided it to the MEA, has extended support and remained in touch. Following the incident, the MEA had identified the abducted individuals and said in a statement that the Ministry's senior officials were closely monitoring the evolving situation and remained engaged at various levels to facilitate safe and early release of the Indian nationals. The MEA also said that the Indian Embassy in Bamako was in constant contact with the local authorities and security agencies.


Time of India
an hour ago
- Time of India
Fearing torture and arrest, migrants from NCR hire buses to return home
1 2 Malda: Two buses with about 100 migrant workers from the National Capital Region returned to South Dinajpur's Buniadpur on Monday after traversing a distance of more than 1,500 km over two days. The passengers, who had arranged the private buses with their own money, said they had fled as they were afraid of being picked up by Delhi and Haryana cops on the suspicion of being Bangladeshis, tortured and forced to give up all their earnings to secure a release. Among them were several women who worked as domestic helps in Gurgaon.'s posh residential complexes. Not all who made the return journey had faced detention in NCR, but each one had a story to tell of how "people dressed as cops" were picking up Bengali-speaking migrants at night, refusing to accept their IDs and demanding Rs 5-6 lakh for their release. "We lived in Gurgaon for years with our families. We have all our documents to prove Indian citizenship. But we were still being being harassed by police and told to prove our identity. We were so scared that we hired a bus to return home," said Masud Karim, a resident of Rangapukur under Bangshihari police station You Can Also Check: Kolkata AQI | Weather in Kolkata | Bank Holidays in Kolkata | Public Holidays in Kolkata Jakir Mollah, who had found employment in Delhi four years ago, said, "The cops are picking up anyone at night. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like It's Genius for Learning Languages [See Why] Talkpal AI Undo They are not accepting any documents. Either one has to pay them money or be kicked, abused and then jailed. I did not want to end up in a police station and decided to return home with my family." Getting off the bus, Mojlesh Mollah said, "No document is a valid identity for the cops (in NCR). The more you keep showing, the more they keep asking. One cannot live in a place with the constant fear of being picked up by cops." Their fear of being harassed and thrown in a lockup is not misplaced. Junaid Alam of Gedrigach village under Goalpokhor police station of North Dinajpur was employed in a carpet factory in Panipat for the past two years. A few days back, he claimed, he was picked up by police and taken to Panipat police station. There, he was interrogated on his citizenship and pressed to confess that he was a Bangladeshi. When he refused, Alam alleged, he was brutally beaten up. His sustained a fracture in his leg in the police assault and was hospitalised. His family managed to bring him home last Thursday. Two other youths from Goalpokhor, Sabir Alam and Md Kabir, also met the same fate. A resident of Bijuvita village, Sabir returned home with a broken leg on Saturday night. He had been working in a carpet factory in Panipat for 15 years. On July 29, police came to the factory and checked his Aadhaar and EPIC. The next day, cops came again and picked him up. For three days, he was tortured in custody and suffered a fracture in his leg. "They kept insisting that I confess that I was a Bangladeshi," he claimed. Kabir from Solpara village, however, has still not been able to return home. A video in which he claims being tortured by Panipat police and appeals for help has reached his family. Both alleged that cops took away all their money. State minister Golam Rabbani visited their families and assured help. Trinamool Congress in a statement on Monday said, "They were beaten, abused and extorted by Delhi Police, which allegedly demanded bribes of ₹5–7 lakh for their release. These are Indian citizens, targeted solely for their language and identity. This is a hate-driven crackdown on the Bengali identity, enabled and emboldened by the Bangla Birodhi BJP regime. Delhi Police has turned into a tool of linguistic apartheid, criminalising Bangla, vilifying Bengalis, and extorting helpless workers. "


Time of India
an hour ago
- Time of India
Panipat police in Haryana file chargesheet against Kairana resident Naumen Elahi for spying during Operation Sindoor
1 2 Chandigarh: Haryana Police have filed a detailed chargesheet against Naumen Elahi, a former factory security guard accused of spying for Pakistan's Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) during Operation Sindoor , India's response to Pahalgam terror attack. This marks a significant step in the investigation into an alleged spy ring operating across North India. Elahi, who is from Kairana in Uttar Pradesh, was arrested on May 13 for allegedly sharing sensitive videos and information on Indian defence installations and troop movements with his ISI handler, Iqbal Kana. He remains in judicial custody at Panipat jail. Panipat's crime investigation agency (CIA) submitted the chargesheet before a duty magistrate on Saturday. The case is scheduled for a hearing on Aug 12 to consider arguments for committal to a sessions court. Officials claim that the chargesheet spans hundreds of pages, with more than 200 of those detailing Elahi's movements, mobile call records, WhatsApp logs, and the digital trail of data sent to Pakistan. Investigators have also included SIM cards that Elahi had used, his passport, and documents recovered during interrogation, along with records of financial transactions allegedly routed from Pakistan. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like Access all TV channels anywhere, anytime Techno Mag Learn More Undo Police say Elahi had travelled to Pakistan in 2017 and remained under the radar of Indian intelligence agencies since. He is believed to have been recruited by Iqbal Kana, a former resident of Kairana who fled to Pakistan three decades ago after being named in an arms smuggling case involving more than 290 illegal weapons. Authorities allege that Elahi admitted to maintaining contact with Kana and transmitting confidential information concerning Indian security agencies knowingly. Elahi is one of five individuals arrested under espionage charges in Haryana since May. Of the five, only two — Elahi and YouTuber Jyoti Malhotra — remain in custody. The other detainee, Tareef from Nuh, is expected to appear in court on Sunday as his police remand ends. The cops say the arrests form part of a broader investigation into cross-border intelligence operations targeting India's security infrastructure.