A US-based Indian journalist alleged verbal abuse and physical assault by Khalistan supporters while he was covering a pro-Khalistan protest outside the Indian Embassy in Washington on Saturday afternoon.
In a tweet on Sunday, Washington-based Indian scribe, Lalit Jha, while sharing a video of the altercation, alleged that he was hit on his left ear with sticks by Khalistan supporters as he was covering the protest.
Jha also thanked US Secret Service for protecting him, and helping him do his job.
Speaking to news agency ANI, Jha said he mulled calling 911 as he feared for his physical safety but luckily spotted some Secret Service officers and narrated the incident to them.
Narrating his ordeal, Jha said that pro-Khalistan protesters waving Khalistan flags descended upon the Indian Embassy in presence of the US Secret Service. The protesters raised slogans in favour of fugitive Waris Punjab De chief Amritpal Singh and Khalistan, threatened to vandalize the embassy premises and even issued threats to Indian Ambassador Taranjit Singh Sandhu.
According to reports, turbaned men of all ages from various parts of the DC-Maryland-Virginia (DMV) area, descended upon the embassy and shouted anti-India slogans and pro-Khalistani speeches on microphones while also accusing the Punjab Police of human rights violations during their ongoing search for Amritpal Singh.
The Indian Embassy in a statement condemned the incident saying that the attack on Jha highlights the “the violent and anti-social tendencies of the so-called ‘Khalistani protestors’ and their supporters, who routinely engage in wanton violence and vandalism.”
The embassy said that Jha—a senior journalist working for the Press Trust of India (PTI) news agency—was “verbally intimidated and then physically assaulted”. The embassy also thanked US law enforcement agencies for their prompt response.
Over the past week, Khalistan supporters have staged multiple protests outside the Indian embassy and the San Francisco Consulate—which also came under attack on March 20.