Garavi Gujarat USA

K-pop band speaks on antiAsian hate during the US visit

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SOUTH KOREAN K-pop band BTS didn't sing a word but in a White House visit Tuesday (31) to meet president Joe Biden the supergroup's message against anti-Asian racism came loud and clear.

The seven stars, dressed in matching dark suits and ties, with white shirts, joined White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre at the briefing room podium.

The singer Park Ji-min, better known as Jimin, said through a translator that the group is ‘devastated by the recent surge of hate crimes' in the US.

Another member, Suga, appealed for tolerance, saying, ‘It's not wrong to be different. I think equality begins when we open up and embrace all of our difference­s.'

Group members did not take questions from reporters before going into a meeting with Biden and, according to the White House, recording ‘digital content.'

Outside the mansion's grounds on the other side of a tall black fence, fans who dub themselves the ‘Army' gathered in hopes of a glimpse.

The brief appearance before journalist­s itself reportedly garnered more than 300,000 viewers on the White House's YouTube channel, more than 10 times the traffic on a day when the only people watching events in the briefing room are mostly media or political profession­als.

It was certainly something new for economic policy advisor Brian Deese, who had been scheduled to brief reporters on Biden's fight against US inflation right after the group left.

‘I get to go home and tell my kids that BTS opened for me,' he said to laughter.

Anti-Asian sentiment and violence in America have grown during the coronaviru­s pandemic in a phenomenon many blame on fallout from the Covid-19 pandemic.

Just in 2021, hate crimes against Asians shot up 339 percent, according to the Center for the Study of Hate and Extremism.

 ?? K-pop band BTS at the White House ??
K-pop band BTS at the White House

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