OPINDIA is a right wing trash for Hindutva types. Likely funded by the small hat people.
If in-fact the Anglo trash called the Indian a "P*ki B*tch", it means he was targeting a Muslim/Pakistani woman to gR*pe. One incident should be enough to raise the hair on the back of your neck.
Hope I do not get killed for this - but I suggest hold a massive protest/rally in London and be seen and heard.
Too many times Pakistanis are reactive vs being pro-active and it's been hurting us across the world.
Forget about defending the asylum or refugees - islamic or non islamic - f**k them. They are on their own. Your first priority is your families and communities that have been around the UK since the 1950s. If you can do it for the Palestinians then you bet your behind you can do it for Pakistanis in the UK. Claim your place in society i.e. non in our name etc. Being a minority surrounded by a hostile population, best you plan accordingly to deal with the problem before it becomes normalized. What I am trying to say is use soft-power to disarm as many racists as you can.
Totally Wrong and Dangerous .
For non brits .........
The use of the term "****" in English was first recorded in 1964, during a period of increased South Asian immigration to the United Kingdom. At this time, the term "****" was very much in mixed usage; it was often used as a slur. While it might seem likely that it would only be directed towards
Pakistanis, it has also been directed at people of other
South Asian backgrounds (mainly Indians and Bangladeshis) as well as people from other demographics who physically resemble
South Asians.
"****-bashing"
Starting in the late-1960s,and peaking in the 1970s and 1980s, violent gangs opposed to immigration took part in attacks known as "****-bashing", which targeted and assaulted South Asians and businesses owned by them, and occasionally other ethnic minorities. "****-bashing" became more common after
Enoch Powell's
Rivers of Blood speech in 1968; polls at the time showed that Powell's anti-immigrant rhetoric held support amongst the majority of the white populace at the time.
"****-bashing" peaked during the 1970s1980s, with the attackers often being supporters of
far-right fascist, racist and
anti-immigrant movements, including the
white power skinheads, the
National Front, and the
British National Party.
These attacks were usually referred to as either "****-bashing" or "skinhead
terror", with the attackers usually called "****-bashers" or "skinheads". "****-bashing" was partly fuelled by the
media's anti-immigrant rhetoric at the time, and by
systemic failures of state authorities, which included under-reporting racist attacks, the criminal justice system not taking racist violence seriously, constant racial harassment by police, and police involvement in racist violence.
Asians were frequently stereotyped as "weak" and "passive" in the 1960s and 1970s, with Pakis viewed as "passive objects" and "unwilling to fight back", making them seen as easy targets by "****-bashers".
The
Joint Campaign Against Racism committee reported that there had been more than 20,000 racist attacks on British
people of colour, including
Britons of South Asian origin, during 1985.
Drawing inspiration from the African-American civil rights movement, the
Black Power movement, and the
anti-apartheid movement, young
British Asian activists began a number of
anti-racist youth movements against "****-bashing", including the Bradford Youth Movement in 1977, the
Bangladeshi Youth Movement following the murder of
Altab Ali in 1978, and the
Newham Youth Movement following the murder of Akhtar Ali Baig in 1980.
The earliest groups to resist "****-bashing" date back to 1968 1970, with two distinct movements that emerged: the integrationist approach began by the Pakistani Welfare Association and National Federation of Pakistani Associations attempted to establish positive race relations while maintaining law and order, which was contrasted by the autonomous approach began by the Pakistani Progressive Party and the Pakistani Workers' Union which engaged in vigilantism as self-defence against racially motivated violence and police harassment in conjunction with the Black Power movement (often working with the British Black Panthers and Communist Workers League of Britain) while also seeking to replace the "weak" and "passive" stereotypes of Pakistanis and Asians.
Divisions arose between the integrationist and autonomous movements by 1970, with integrationist leader Raja Mahmudabad criticising the vigilantism of the latter as "alien to the spirit and practice of
Islam" whereas PPP/PWU leader Abdul Hye stated they "have no intention of fighting or killing anyone, but if it comes to us, we will hit back." It was not until the 1980s and 1990s that academics began to take racially motivated violence into serious focus, partly as a result of black and Asian people entering academic life.