Stay patient in adversity ... and give glory and praise to your Sustainer. --Qur'an 40:55

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Vicious attack on Muslim cabbie in New York

New Yorkers, including the city’s mayor, and several national US organizations, strongly condemned the attack on a taxi driver believed to have been targeted because he is a Muslim.

The attacker, a 21-year-old man who was reportedly drunk at the time of the incident, has been arrested and charged with attempted murder as a hate crime after he attacked Ahmed Sharif on Tuesday evening.

The man was 43-year-old Sharif’s first fare of the night, the Taxi Workers Alliance said in a statement. As the cab headed for Times Square, the passenger began a friendly conversation with Sharif about his religion, asking him if he was fasting in observance of the Muslim month of Ramadan.

After a few moments of silence, the man “suddenly started cursing and screaming,” the statement said.

“He yelled ‘Assalamu Alaikum. Consider this a checkpoint,’ and then slashed Mr. Sharif across the neck. As Mr. Sharif went to knock the knife out, the perpetrator, continuing to scream loudly, cut the taxi driver in the face (from nose to upper lip), arm and hand,” the alliance said.

New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg (pictured) said he had spoken to Sharif and “assured him that ethnic or religious bias has no place in our city. The mayor said Sharif had accepted an invitation to meet with him at City Hall on Thursday.

The Taxi Workers Alliance linked the attack on Sharif to the controversy surrounding plans for a mosque and interfaith center near the New York site of the September 11, 2001 attacks.

The New York City Coalition to Stop Islamophobia denounced the attack as “particularly disturbing in the context of the toxic atmosphere of Islamophobia produced by opponents of the Park51 community project.”

The Council on American-Islamic Relations also warned that inflammatory rhetoric emerging from the debate about the center, which critics say insults the memory of those killed on 9/11, was creating a dangerous environment.

Sharif, in remarks released by the Taxi Workers Alliance, described himself as “very sad”.

“I have been here more than 25 years. I have been driving a taxi more than 15 years. All my four kids were born here. I never feel this hopeless and insecure before,” he said.   »»» easterneye.eu (U.K.)

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