Indian fights for life after racial attack in London

Written By DNA Web Team | Updated:

A 67-year old Indian, originally hailing from West Bengal, is fighting for his life after a mob mercilessly beat him in a racial attack in south London.

A 67-year old Indian, originally hailing from West Bengal, is fighting for his life after a mob mercilessly beat him in a racial attack in south London. Kolkata-born Ekram ul Haque was battered to the ground in front of his five-year-old granddaughter as they returned from a local south London mosque, police said.

Three teenage boys have been charged with assaulting Haque and a man in his 40s near Tooting, an area dominated by Asians. The victim's granddaughter Marian, who was unhurt in the incident, gave a detailed account of the incident which took place on August 31. Police have sought help of eye witnesses.
    
Scotland Yard today said the assault was being treated as "racially motivated." A report in the Daily Mail quoted doctors saying Haque, who is on a ventilator, has no chance of survival. Haque moved to Belfast, the capital of Northern Ireland, in 1972. He met his wife there and the couple moved to London in the early 1980s. He worked in the textile industry but later became a warden in a home for the disabled from which he retired last year. Haque's 35-year-old son described the attack as "mindless violence."