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India demands ‘strongest action’ from US after Kansas killing

Victim’s widow ‘was initially concerned about racism in America’

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living in the US for the last few years, were targeted at a bar in Olathe, a suburb of Kansas City, late Wednesday.

“USA should respond to this incident. American president and people of America, they should come out openly to condemn such actions... and then take strongest action,” Informatio­n and Broadcasti­ng Minister M. Venkaiah Naidu was quoted by the Press Trust of India (PTI) as saying.

Srinivas Kuchibhotl­a, 32, was killed and Alok Reddy Madasani, 32, wounded in the attack. Both worked as aviation systems engineers for GPS manufactur­er Garmin.

“These kind of incidents involving racial discrimina­tion are shameful,” Naidu said in the southern city of Hyderabad where the victims’ families live.

“They will dent the image of USA. So the US president, administra­tion and civil societies should unequivoca­lly respond and condemn such incidents.”

US authoritie­s late Wednesday detained 51- year- old Adam Purinton at a restaurant after he claimed he had killed two Middle Easterners.

He has been charged with premeditat­ed first- degree murder and two counts of attempted premeditat­ed first- degree murder and is being held on a $ 2 million bond. The FBI is trying to determine if the shooting was a hate crime. Madasani has now been released from hospital.

His father Jagan Mohan Reddy, a chief engineer with the Telangana state government, told AFP they would spend at least a week in the US before “taking stock of what to do (next).”

“They lost a dear friend ( Kuchibhotl­a) in the attack but somehow, by God’s grace, my son survived,” Reddy said.

He said his son and the deceased were very good friends and had known each other for at least six or seven years in the US.

“It is unthinkabl­e that they have been separated like this,” Reddy added.

The shooting has made headlines in the Indian media, amid concern that the hard- line immigratio­n policies of President Donald Trump may have created the climate for such an attack.

The Indian community in the US reached out over the weekend in solidarity with the victims.

“There’s no place for senseless violence & bigotry in our society,” tweeted Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella, one of the most prominent Americans of Indian descent.

“My heart is with the victims & families of the horrific shooting in Kansas.”

A GoFundMe online fundraiser page was quickly set up after the shooting, and as of Sunday had collected more than $ 600,000 — much of it in small contributi­ons of $ 5 and $ 10.

The money is to help with the funeral expenses “and other ongoing grief / recovery support costs” for Kuchibhotl­a’s widow Sunayana Dumala.

Dumala told a press conference Friday she was initially concerned about racism in the US.

“We’ve read many times in newspapers of some kind of shooting happening,” she said, according to the Kansas City Star. “And we always wondered, how safe?”

Dumala credited her late husband’s optimism for the fact that they emigrated and she eventually found a job.

There are believed to be some 300,000 residents of Indian descent living in the US.

 ??  ?? Sunayana Dumala, the widow of an Indian killed in the US, addresses the media in Olathe, Kansas. (AP)
Sunayana Dumala, the widow of an Indian killed in the US, addresses the media in Olathe, Kansas. (AP)

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