New York Goes Racist But How?

Published March 22nd, 2021 - 12:23 GMT
Racist attacks increase in New York
People march in downtown Montreal, Quebec, Canada during a demonstration against anti-Asian racism on March 21, 2021. People gathered to commemorate and mourn the eight people, six of whom were women of Asian descent, killed in Atlanta, Georgia, United States, on March 16, 2021. Three massage parlors around Atlanta were targeted by a 21-year-old, Robert Aaron Long, who now faces eight counts of murder and one charge of aggravated assault. Andrej Ivanov / AFP
Highlights
Attacker, a black male, yelled demeaning anti-Asian attacks, a witness says

A 68-year-old man Asian man has been violently assaulted on the New York City subway by an assailant shouting racial insults, in the latest shocking incident of anti-Asian hate. 

Narayange Bodhi, originally from Sri Lanka, was commuting to his job as a security guard at 2.40pm on Friday when the attacker viciously punched him on a 1 Train in Lower Manhattan, police and witnesses say. 

Suspect Marc Mathieu, 36, of the Bronx was arrested on Sunday and charged with assault after NYPD Transit cops recognized his image on a wanted poster. Mathieu has nine prior arrests, a police source told DailyMail.com 

The assailant randomly attacked Bodhi while shouting 'You Asian motherf***er!' according to witness George Okrepkie, who aided the victim until police arrived.

'I could not believe that somebody would attack a man of that age,' Okrepkie told WNBC-TV. 'Before I could even look he was standing on top of him.'  

NYPD said on Sunday that they did not yet have evidence that the attack was racially motivated. 

The NYPD Hate Crimes Task Force published a call for information about the attacker without calling the incident a hate crime.

The alleged assailant had been described as a 6-foot-2 black male with a muscular build, aged around 30 and last seen distinctively dressed in a black fedora, pink hoodie, black leather motorcycle jacket, large chain necklace and light colored pants.

Okerpkie tried to grab the attacker, but said the man escaped out the subway doors as the train came to a stop at the Franklin Street Station in Manhattan. 

The Good Samaritan took off his scarf and helped Bodhi use it to stop the bleeding until police arrived.  

Bodhi's family told the NBC affiliate that he has no memory of the attack, and suffered bruising on his face.

It comes amid national outcry over anti-Asian attack, which has skyrocketed in the coronavirus pandemic. 

Last week, the NYPD revealed that it had recorded has recorded a 1,300 percent increase in anti-Asian attacks during the pandemic. 

On Sunday, thousands marched in Atlanta, New York and Washington DC, among other cities, following the mass shooting last week at Asian-owned spas in Georgia. 

The shooter, Robert Aaron Long, admitted to the murders but denied racial motives, claiming he was a frustrated sex addict who had frequented the spas and wanted to 'eliminate' a temptation.

Asian Americans have expressed outrage at the police for refusing to declare the shooting a hate crime, however.  

In New York, mayoral candidate and former Democratic presidential hopeful Andrew Yang invited demonstrators to raise their hand if they had seen a spike in anti-Asian attacks since the start of the pandemic.

Many activist blame the antagonism toward Asians on former president Donald Trump, who frequently called COVID-19 the 'China virus'.  


Another Asian man, 66, was also punched in the face in an apparent random attack on Saturday morning in Manhattan's Chinatown. 

In that incident, an unknown man believed to be homeless approached the victim, began yelling at him and then struck him in the face with a closed fist.  

This article has been adapted from its original source.

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