Home New Look 2015 Islamophobia Register Australia report shows doubling in incidents

Islamophobia Register Australia report shows doubling in incidents

17
0


Ealaf Al-Easawi was minding her own business, shopping on her lunch break, when from out of nowhere a woman allegedly smacked her on the left cheek. The earring she wore behind her hijab fell out. Before the childcare worker could comprehend what just happened, she was allegedly shoved to the ground.

“I didn’t even get a chance to defend myself,” Al-Easawi said. “It was so quick. At that time I could barely breathe, I was crying so hard, shaking, shocked, traumatised. I’ve never had something like that happen to me in my life.”

Ealaf Al-Easawi hasn’t left her home alone for a month, after she and another Muslim woman were randomly attacked at a Melbourne shopping centre.

Ealaf Al-Easawi hasn’t left her home alone for a month, after she and another Muslim woman were randomly attacked at a Melbourne shopping centre.Credit: Luis Enrique Ascui

It’s been one month since the alleged attack on Al-Easawi and another Muslim woman at a Melbourne shopping plaza. But she hasn’t left the house alone since, fearful something might happen again. “I’m an independent woman … being at home in these four walls waiting for someone to take me out feels disgusting,” she said.

“But since the attack, I’m not feeling ok, to be honest. I’m scared to go by myself outside. I am having lots of flashbacks, I dream about it lots … I need groceries for the kids’ lunch boxes but when we go out, I’m looking at people, looking behind me, turning around.”

Al-Easawi’s experience last month is symptomatic of a surge in Islamophobia in Australia, although hers was rare in garnering national headlines. While the precise extent of Islamophobia is hard to quantify, the organisation Islamophobia Register Australia has been inviting people to report their experiences since 2014, with its small team contacting individuals to verify incidents.

Loading

Its latest report, from 2023 and 2024, indicates in-person incidents have more than doubled over the last two years. It verified 309 in-person incidents of Islamophobia, and 366 online – the highest tally since the organisation was created 10 years ago. This included 139 in-person incidents in NSW and 79 in Victoria.

The most common type of in-person incident was verbal intimidation or harassment, which accounted for 61 per cent of reports. This was followed by discrimination (9 per cent), physical assault (9 per cent), property damage (8 per cent), non-verbal harassment such as offensive gestures (7 per cent) and written intimidation such as hate mail (6 per cent).

“Beyond mere numbers, these in-person incidents included physical assaults that caused hospitalisations, a genuine bomb being left at a home, an arson attack, graffiti attacks calling for the killing of Muslims, vandalism including the desecration of a mosque,” the report said.

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here