Jonathan Mok, a twenty-three
year-old student from Singapore, said he was attacked at around 9.15pm on 24
February on Oxford Street.
A young man who was beaten
up in a racist attack on one of London’s busiest streets has said he was
targeted because of coronavirus.
In a Facebook post, Mr Mok
said a man, who was with three or four other men and one woman, said something
about “coronavirus” before punching him in the face.
He said another member of
the group then said: “I don’t want your coronavirus in my country,” before
hitting him on the nose and causing blood to splatter on the pavement.
The group then ran off
before the police arrived.
Following the attack, the
victim was taken to hospital, where he was told that he had suffered several
fractures to his face.
Doctors also told him that
he might need to undergo reconstructive surgery.
One photograph posted by
the victim on Facebook shows him with a black eye and a bloodied face
immediately after the assault.
Another photograph taken
the next day reveals the extent of the swelling around his eye.
A spokesperson for the Met
Police told The Independent: “Police are investigating a racially aggravated
assault in Oxford Street near Tottenham Court Road station at around 2115hrs on
Monday, 24 February."
“The victim – a 23-year-old
man – was punched and sustained facial injuries."
Police said there had been
no arrests so far but that they were working to identify the suspects.
Mr Mok, who has lived in
London for two years and studying at UCL, wrote in his Facebook post: “Racism
is not stupidity – racism is hate. Racists constantly find excuses to expound
their hatred – and in this current backdrop of the coronavirus, they’ve found
yet another excuse.”
This attack comes amid a
spate of reports of racism against Asian people following the outbreak of
coronavirus, which was first identified in Wuhan, China, in December last year.

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