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NY cops hunt attacker who hospitalised Chinese American

The US Senate passed legislation last week aimed at fighting the rise in hate crimes against Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders.

Staff Writers
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People cross a busy street in the shopping district of Flushing, a largely Asian American neighbourhood in the Queens borough of New York, March 30. A rash of anti-Asian attacks across the US has led police and others to step up patrols in neighborhoods like this one. Photo: AP
People cross a busy street in the shopping district of Flushing, a largely Asian American neighbourhood in the Queens borough of New York, March 30. A rash of anti-Asian attacks across the US has led police and others to step up patrols in neighborhoods like this one. Photo: AP

A 61-year-old Chinese American man was viciously assaulted and kicked repeatedly in the head in New York City, police have said.

The man was collecting cans when he was attacked from behind, knocked to the ground and kicked in the head on Friday evening. He was taken to hospital in critical but stable condition.

Surveillance video released by the police appears to show the attacker stamping on the victim’s head, reports the Associated Press.

Police have not specified a motive, but the NYPD’s hate crimes task force is investigating the attack, the latest in a troubling rise in anti-Asian hate crimes in New York and around the country.

Mayor Bill de Blasio called the attack “outrageous” on Twitter. “Make no mistake, we will find the perpetrator and they will be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law,” de Blasio said on Saturday.

The attack recalled last month’s assault near Times Square in which a woman who immigrated from the Philippines was knocked to the ground and stamped on by an attacker who shouted anti-Asian slurs. A parolee convicted of killing his mother nearly two decades ago was arrested for that attack.

The US Senate passed legislation last week aimed at fighting the rise in hate crimes against Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders. The measure would expedite the review of hate crimes at the Department of Justice and provide support for local law enforcement in response to thousands of reported violent incidents in the past year.

Governor Andrew Cuomo said on Sunday he would direct the state hate crimes task force to offer assistance in investigating Friday’s attack in East Harlem.

“I’m sickened to learn of yet another bigoted act of violence against an Asian American man,” the governor said in a statement. “This is not who we are as New Yorkers, and we will not let these cowardly acts of hate against members of our New York family intimidate us.”

Police did not release the victim’s name, but multiple news outlets identified him as Yao Pan Ma, a former restaurant worker who lost his job because of the pandemic and was collecting cans to make ends meet.

The victim’s wife, Baozhen Chen, 57, pleaded for police to find her husband’s attacker in an interview with the New York Post.

Speaking in Mandarin, she said, “Please capture him as soon as possible and make him pay.”