The Post

Pulled from school over racism

- Donna-Lee Biddle

A rise in race-related attacks has seen parents take their child out of school for fear of being bullied.

A number of New Zealanders of Asian descent have reported racism towards them since coronaviru­s broke out in Wuhan, China, late last year, Race Relations Commission­er Meng Foon said.

In the past five weeks alone, the Human Rights Commission has received 252 reports relating to coronaviru­s.

Foon said 86 were considered race-related, with the bulk of those reports geared towards

Asian people.

‘‘They primarily related to anti-Chinese racism and harassment, or to events affecting other people of Asian descent who believe they were mistaken for being Chinese.’’

Asian Family Services and Netsafe are also gathering data in relation to racist abuse and hate speech.

In one example that happened pre-level-four-lockdown, a student was removed from her Whanga¯rei school after experienci­ng daily ‘‘racist abuse’’, including bullying, discrimina­tion, and isolation.

Her parents feared she wouldn’t be safe if she stayed.

At Hobsonvill­e Point Primary in Auckland, principal Daniel Birch said there were two incidents where Asian students were targeted because of Covid19.

‘‘We dealt with that pretty quickly and talked to the kids about the need to be nonjudgeme­ntal. It was uninformed kids being idiots, nothing more than that, and we had restorativ­e conversati­ons with them.’’

The full primary school has a roll of 750 and about 32 per cent identify as Asian, Birch said.

‘‘The stuff I hear is quite general, including people calling it a

China virus, people telling internatio­nal students they brought the virus here from China, despite the students being Korean – those sorts of things,’’ Foon said.

Netsafe has also seen a 63 per cent increase on reports between January 1 and April 12, compared to the previous six months.

The reports were incidents categorise­d as having a hate speech element, Netsafe spokeswoma­n Angela Boundy said.

‘‘This means reports that denigrate a person’s colour, race, ethnic or national origins, religion, gender, sexual orientatio­n or disability.’’

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