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Singaporean student in London says he was assaulted after reacting to COVID-19 commen

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SINGAPORE: A Singaporean student in London said he was assaulted after he reacted to passers-by who were making comments about his race and COVID-19.
Mr Jonathan Mok, 24, said he was walking along Oxford Street in London on Feb 24 when he heard a racist comment and the word "coronavirus" from some youths.
AdvertisementAdvertisementMr Mok then turned to look at them, because he did not want them to think he was afraid and that "Asians are easily bullied".
"I felt really angry ... It is ridiculous people are being targeted for being Asian," he told CNA on Tuesday (Mar 3).
Mr Mok has lived in London for two years while studying at UCL, but travels back to Singapore during his summer holidays.

[h=3]READ: COVID-19 spreading fast outside China, airports to increase screenings[/h] AdvertisementAdvertisement[h=3]READ: 4 COVID-19 patients discharged from hospital, 2 new cases reported: MOH[/h]After he looked at them, Mr Mok said one of the youths shouted: "Don’t you dare look at me, you …". He did not catch the last word because of the man’s accent.
The youths – three or four men and a woman – then approached him, Mr Mok said, adding that they "seemed no older than 20 years old, but were all more than a head taller than me".
Suddenly, he was punched in the face twice, he said, and another attacker attempted to kick him as he tried to explain what was happening to another passer-by.
The man who tried to kick him then said: “I don’t want your coronavirus in my country,” before punching him again, said Mr Mok. His nose started bleeding and blood was splattered all across the pavement, he added.

The group left the scene before the police arrived. Immediately after the assault, Mr Mok said he focused on stopping his nose from bleeding, and returned home after the police and ambulance let him go.
He also said that he has spoken to the shopowners of the store he was attacked in front of, and the police have yet to contact them regarding CCTV footage.
He told CNA that he was angry because he knew he was outnumbered, and could not fight back as they were all taller than him and he was recovering from a broken finger in an earlier incident.
[h=3]READ: 'I am not a virus': France's Asian community pushes back over xenophobia[/h][h=3]READ: MHA to look into 'racist, xenophobic' remarks by religious teacher over coronavirus[/h]Mr Mok said he has heard other similar racist comments, “but nothing so overt” so far.
“I’ve had friends who were rejected by shops in another European city because they were Chinese, where the owners simply said they don't want the coronavirus,” he added.
Mr Mok told CNA he is now more wary in public but tries not to allow it to affect his life.
“I do everything as if it were normal ... I'm not afraid of these people and I refuse to let them think I am afraid of them.”

[h=3]BOOKMARK THIS: Our comprehensive coverage of the novel coronavirus and its developments[/h]Download our app or subscribe to our Telegram channel for the latest updates on the coronavirus outbreak: https://cna.asia/telegram
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