Skip to content
Search

Latest Stories

Hindu and Sikh Americans denounce Charlottesville violence

Hindu and Sikh Americans have condemned the violence unleashed by white supremacists during a rally in Virginia in which a woman was killed and the subsequent remarks by US President Donald Trump in which he blamed both sides for it. A woman was killed and 19 were injured when a car ploughed into a crowd of counter-protesters in Charlottesville.

“What our country witnessed this past weekend in Charlottesville, violently illustrated that when it comes to the expression of hateful, intolerant, profoundly bigoted ideologies, accompanied by implicit and explicit violence, tolerance can reach its limits, and such words and actions must forcefully be repudiated and condemned,” the Hindu American Foundation (HAF) said in a statement.


Hindu and Sikh Americans denounce Virginia violence. “While President Trump condemned the forces of white supremacy, neo-Nazis and the KKK by name on August 14, 2017, the Foundation, like most Americans, stands stunned and outraged that Trump reverted yesterday to voicing a false moral equivalency between the values and actions of the groups participating in the Unite the Right rally and those of the brave individuals opposing them,” it said.

To maintain and build a tolerant, pluralistic society, these forms of intolerance and exclusivism themselves cannot be tolerated, the HAF said. “There is no place in American society for white supremacy, white nationalism, anti-Semitism, neo-Nazis, the KKK, or any ideology associated with these forms of ignorance and bigotry,” HAF said in a statement.

“What happened in Charlottesville is shameful and reprehensible,” said Rajwant Singh co-founder National Sikh Campaign.

“Driven by the same beliefs as the terrorist who struck the Sikh community in Oak Creek, WI just over five years ago, these white supremacists, KKK members and Neo-Nazis are once again trying to divide America through hate and bigotry,” he said.

“We must make it clear that their incendiary ideologies have no place in American discourse. This situation serves as a painful reminder that there is still a lot of work to be done in bringing Americans of all faiths, colours and communities together,” Singh said.

More For You

Tech-led roles push UK financial services vacancies up 12%

Technology-driven roles are reshaping hiring patterns across Britain’s financial services sector

Canva

Tech-led roles push UK financial services vacancies up 12%

  • Financial services vacancies rose 12 per cent in 2025
  • Software and computer roles now form the largest share of jobs
  • Clerical hiring drops sharply as automation spreads

Demand for specialist skills such as artificial intelligence, regulation and data reporting pushed vacancies in Britain’s financial services sector up by 12 per cent in 2025, according to recruitment firm Morgan McKinley. Employers stepped up hiring as they tried to keep pace with rapid technological change reshaping the industry.

The increase came despite a noticeable slowdown toward the end of the year. Hiring eased in the fourth quarter as global market volatility and uncertainty around the government’s November budget made firms more cautious, according to the London Employment Monitor, a quarterly survey tracking financial services vacancies.

Keep ReadingShow less