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Chinese looking face 被歧视是越来越严重了,大家还是做好心理准备,时间到了就收拾收拾赶紧回国吧。搞不好哪天走在街上没事就得挨揍。。。太恐怖了!!!
华人经理处理的很不错,要赞一下
Man booted from Auckland cafe after telling family 'go back to China' in racist outburst that left manager in tears。
https://www.newshub.co.nz/home/new-zealand/2021/03/man-booted-from-auckland-cafe-after-telling-family-go-back-to-china-in-racist-outburst-that-left-manager-in-tears.html
A man has been booted from a coffee shop in an upmarket Auckland suburb after an alleged racist tirade against Asian-New Zealander customers that left the cafe's Chinese-born manager in tears.
He was also filmed parroting the debunked Moriori myth - an argument seeking to legitimise European colonisation of New Zealand - before being kicked out of Epsom's Humble Villager cafe on Monday morning.
..........
The abuse was aimed at Auckland-born and raised Fiona Yang, 18, her brother Felix, 21, and their mother, who arrived at the cafe not long before the man got there at around 11am.
The family, who are of Chinese descent, were in the process of ordering when the man arrived in the queue behind them and asked if he could order first as he was in a hurry.
When Felix refused, the man is said to have become "really triggered" and launched into his racist diatribe.
Ellen Zhang, who manages the Humble Villager cafe and was taking the Yangs' order at the time, said the man was very angry and complained that the "bloody Chinese" always ordered slowly.
"He said 'you people are always like this'," Felix recounts.
.........
On the way to finding a table he approached them again, this time allegedly to tell them to go back to China - despite the fact both Felix and Fiona were born in Auckland's Mt Albert.
"I think that [first incident] lit up anger in him," Felix explained.
"He came over to the table [to tell us to go back to China] and then he took our order number, because he wanted to confuse the kitchen staff - which he did."
Zhang says the man later told the Yangs white people were in New Zealand first, and that their arrival had "opened the door" to Asians. By this time the family were fed up, and their mother lashed out.
"My mum was like 'the Māori were here first'," Fiona said. "So then he came up to us [again]. He was like 'let me give you a history lesson' and then said the Māori ate people or something."
In footage of the incident, Zhang and another staffer can be seen telling the man to leave, which he eventually agreed to do after several requests.
A group of Pākehā women at the table next to them then came to comfort both the Yangs and Zhang, who, hurt by the anti-Asian sentiment, had burst into tears.
"They came up and apologised on his behalf saying, like, 'you guys have a right to be here, you guys are New Zealand citizens'," Felix said.
...............
The Yangs say while the man didn't reference the COVID-19 pandemic in his diatribe, they suspect it "probably triggered something" and caused him to lash out.
Fiona hadn't really experienced much racism until coronavirus made landfall in New Zealand. Then, during the first lockdown, a man tried to push her off her skateboard and told her to go back to China.
She says she didn't report it because she didn't have any proof.
"I think because of the COVID lockdowns, there has been more negativity towards Asian people, you know; people who wouldn't say anything before would now feel like they have a right to because of COVID," she said.
"I do have a couple of friends who also experienced general Asian racism."
Zhang, too, says the incident is not in keeping with her experience pre-coronavirus.
"I have been here [in New Zealand] for 15 years and never saw this kind of thing," she said. "I was so shocked."
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