Asian Australian Politician’s Campaign Posters Vandalized With Racist Graffiti
By Ryan General
Election posters for an Asian Australian council candidate have been spray-painted with racist graffiti.
Asian Australian Yongbei Tang, a current candidate for city council in Hobart, is apparently being targeted with racial abuse by still unidentified perpetrators, ABC reports.
Tang, who was born in China, has spent her last 20 years as an Australian citizen and a local in Tasmania. She is now running in a local election in Hobart, which is Tasmania’s capital and most populous city.
In a statement, Tang revealed that her campaign posters in Hobart’s suburb of New Town were vandalized with the words: “No No Chinks.”
“My campaign poster located in New Town was vandalized with a racist slur. I feel very disgusted, sad and ashamed,” Tang was quoted as saying.
“I believe that most Tasmanians are kind and welcoming people to our diverse country. So, I’d like to acknowledge it’s not the majority of Tasmanians but a select few who have these racist thoughts.”
Tasmanian Greens leader Cassy O’Connor claimed that Tang has a connection with China’s Communist Party, but she has consistently denied and refuted this.
“I am very grateful for the chance to be an Australian citizen, my children have grown up here and I appreciate Australian values,” Tang said last month. “I just want to give back. I am not a member of the Chinese Communist Party. I’m a good Australian citizen.”
The accusations were reportedly based on her previous association with the Australian Council for the Promotion of Peaceful Reunification of China (ACPPRC), which many believe to be an arm of the Chinese Communist Party.
Tang joined the said group last year believing it was a “cultural” organization but resigned as its vice-chair earlier this year after apparently concluding the group was “too sensitive.”
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