The White House has said that the early reports coming
from Kansas, where an Indian engineer was shot dead and another injured in an
apparent hate crime, were “disturbing.” The White House also condemned the
alleged hate crimes against the Jewish community in the US.
White House Press Secretary Sean Spicer told
reporters at his daily news conference that “early reports coming from Kansas
are equally disturbing”.
Srinivas Kuchibhotla, 32, was killed and Alok
Madasani, of the same age, was injured in the shooting by 51-year-old US navy
veteran Adam Purinton who screamed racial slurs and told them “get out of my
country.”
A 24-year-old American named Ian Grillot tried to
intervene and received injuries in the firing in Austins Bar and Grill in
Olathe, Kansas.
Spicer, during his briefing, also condemned the
alleged hate crimes against the Jewish community and asserted that there is no
space for violence based on religion and ethnicity.
“From our country’s founding, we’ve been dedicated
to protecting the freedom of our citizens’ rights to worship. No one in America
should feel afraid to follow the religion of their choosing freely and openly.
The President has dedicated to preserving this originating principle of our
nation,” Spicer said.
“And while we’re at it, I don’t want to get ahead of
law enforcement, but I was asked the other day about the story in Kansas, the
shooting in Kansas. While the story is evolving, early reports out of Kansas
are equally disturbing,” the White House Press Secretary said.
The Federal Bureau of Investigation has joined local
law enforcement agencies in investigating the incident that has shocked the
entire Indian-American community and several hundreds of Indians either working
or studying in the United States.
Spicer said Trump continues to be deeply
disappointed and concerned by the reports of further vandalism at Jewish
cemeteries.
“The cowardly destruction in Philadelphia this
weekend comes on top of similar accounts from Missouri and threats made to
Jewish community centers around the country. The president continues to condemn
these and any other form of anti-semitic and hateful acts in the strongest
terms,” he said.
His remarks came after vandals broke and overturned
more than 500 gravestones at a Jewish cemetery in Philadelphia, the latest in a
spate of recent bomb threats and attacks against sites for Jews across the
United States.
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