New Delhi: In a damage control exercise amid attacks on Indians, a group of young
Australian professionals on Thursday said their country was "multicultural", but agreed that safety of international students was an issue.
The 10-member delegation of
Australian youth leaders, which included some of Indian origin, said they want their government to address the issue but denied that all attacks on Indians were racist.
"Safety has been a concern. There are racist attacks and there are attacks which are not racist," Ruchir
Punjabi, originally from
Ahmedabad, told reporters at the
Australian High Commission here.
Punjabi has played an active role in the campaign for international students in
Australia since 2005 and campaigned heavily for transport concessions in New South Wales.
He said he was once attacked in
Australia. "They wanted money but it was not a racist attack."
The delegation, sponsored by the
Australia India Business Council (AIBC), is visiting the Indian capital for a CII event on Friday.
Punjabi's friend David Barrow, who works in Melbourne and is the President of the National Union of Students, was more vocal. He said international students in
Australia were in a "precarious situation".
"We are aware of international students. They are in precarious situation. The government needs to change the situation. They have started but it is taking time. There is a lot to do. But they are committed and will do," said Barrow.
Charishma Kaliyanda, an Indian origin research assistant to the Parliamentarian Lynda Voltz of New South Wales, advised Indian students to avoid going to "wrong places at the wrong time."
"They need to avoid the areas prone to crime. This requires understanding of the area to be safe," she said, denying she has faced any racist attacks in the "multicultural" society of
Australia.
Archie Ravishankar, a final-year law student, said
Australia was the country of dreams with huge avenues.
"It is a multicultural society. Everybody can dream and every dream can come true there," Ravishankar maintained.
The string of attacks on Indians has caused outrage in India and strained relations between Canberra and New Delhi. One of the attacks was fatal. Nitin Garg was stabbed to death on January 2 in Melbourne while he was walking to the restaurant where he worked.
All the visiting delegates condemned such attacks in
Australia, saying racist or not such attacks cannot be tolerated.
Barrow said the
Australian society has learnt from these attacks to ensure safety for foreigners.
"We now treat foreign students as our guests," he said.
IANS