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== Simon Overland in the news == | |||
Indian government has reacted angrily to a claim by Victoria's chief police officer that Indian students are safer in Australia than in India. India's minister for overseas affairs, Valajay Ravi, has labeled Victoria's Police Commissioner Simon Overland a "petty officer" for saying Australia is safer than India and for criticizing the Indian media's coverage of allegedly racist attacks. Officials in New Delhi have decried what they have described as the inability of a "racist" country to properly protect students while they study at Australian colleges and universities. An Indian newspaper published a cartoon depicting an Australian police officer as a member of the Ku Klux Klan. It prompted a stern reaction in Canberra, where senior government ministers said the cartoon was "deeply offensive." | |||
"Indians are safer in this country than they are in their own country. If you have a look at the data, they are safer here than they are in India," Overland said. These remarks have infuriated India's minister for overseas affairs, Valajay Ravi. He says that, instead of complaining about accusations of racism, the authorities in Australia should "show some results" into the recent violence. --] (]) 00:40, 31 January 2010 (UTC) | |||
== Reason for undoing last 6 edits. == | == Reason for undoing last 6 edits. == |
Revision as of 23:54, 17 February 2010
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Simon Overland in the news
Indian government has reacted angrily to a claim by Victoria's chief police officer that Indian students are safer in Australia than in India. India's minister for overseas affairs, Valajay Ravi, has labeled Victoria's Police Commissioner Simon Overland a "petty officer" for saying Australia is safer than India and for criticizing the Indian media's coverage of allegedly racist attacks. Officials in New Delhi have decried what they have described as the inability of a "racist" country to properly protect students while they study at Australian colleges and universities. An Indian newspaper published a cartoon depicting an Australian police officer as a member of the Ku Klux Klan. It prompted a stern reaction in Canberra, where senior government ministers said the cartoon was "deeply offensive." "Indians are safer in this country than they are in their own country. If you have a look at the data, they are safer here than they are in India," Overland said. These remarks have infuriated India's minister for overseas affairs, Valajay Ravi. He says that, instead of complaining about accusations of racism, the authorities in Australia should "show some results" into the recent violence. --CRAustralia (talk) 00:40, 31 January 2010 (UTC)
Reason for undoing last 6 edits.
I've just undone the last 6 edits to this article. Since I'm not totally sure whether this was either vandalism or an unconstructive (if well-meaning) series of edits, I thought I'd better explain why I've done this.
The editor added several paragraphs about the recent (as of January, 2010) controversy concerning attacks on Indian students in Melbourne. While these do relate to Simon Overland, they do seem to read like a highly topical newspaper report more than an encyclopaedia article. I can't quite shake off the feeling that the reason for this change was anger over the attacks (itself quite understandable) rather than because it was a useful change to the article.
Maybe this section does have a place in this article, and if anyone thinks so, they are free to add the material back again (it can be retrieved from the version of this article immediately before my own recent edit). But I don't think this material belonged under the heading "Career in law enforcement", and I don't think the editor should have removed the material about Simon Overland's career before this controversy arose. Adding the material about Indian students *and* removing the passages about Overland's earlier career made it sound as if this Indian student controversy was the only thing of note in Overland's entire career.
If I have stepped out of line in removing this material, my apologies. M.J.E. (talk) 17:09, 23 January 2010 (UTC)
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