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A soldier stands guard as buses carry pilgrims returning from Iran via the Pakistan-Iran border town of Taftan in March.
A soldier stands guard as buses carry pilgrims returning from Iran via the Pakistan-Iran border town of Taftan in March.

The International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (IFRC) warned on September 17 that the novel coronavirus is driving discrimination toward vulnerable communities in Asia, including migrants and foreigners.

The humanitarian agency surveyed 5,000 people in Indonesia, Malaysia, Myanmar, and Pakistan and found about half blamed a specific group for spreading the coronavirus, with many mentioning Chinese people, immigrants, and foreigners.

"It is particularly concerning that both national migrant and foreign workers are blamed for the spread of COVID-19 as they are quite vulnerable already," Viviane Fluck, one of the lead researchers and the agency's Asia Pacific community engagement and accountability coordinator, told Reuters.

She said there should be more focus on combating "rumors that are linked to underlying power dynamics and structural issues of inequality."

More than half of the Indonesians surveyed blamed "foreigners and rule-breakers" while in Myanmar the groups most often thought to be responsible were people from China and other foreigners.

In Malaysia, two-thirds blamed a specific group, most frequently mentioning migrants, foreign tourists, and "illegal foreigners," the researchers said.

Malaysian authorities arrested hundreds of undocumented migrants and refugees in May in a crackdown the United Nations said could push vulnerable groups into hiding and prevent them from seeking treatment.

Police said at the time the operation was aimed at preventing people from traveling amid movement curbs.

In Pakistan, most people surveyed blamed inadequate government controls on the Iranian border, followed by nationals including pilgrims coming back from Iran and then people from China.

In all four countries, higher education had a small impact on whether respondents blamed a specific group, with university graduates slightly less likely to hold certain people responsible, the researchers said.

An undated photo of Muhammad Masood's passport.
An undated photo of Muhammad Masood's passport.

A psychological exam has been ordered for a Pakistani doctor who has been in custody in the U.S. state of Minnesota since his arrest in March on a terrorism charge.

Muhammad Masood has been indicted on one count of attempting to provide material support to a foreign terrorist organization.

The former researcher at the Mayo Clinic is accused of telling paid FBI informants that he pledged allegiance to the Islamic State (IS) and wanted to carry out lone-wolf attacks in the United States. He also allegedly voiced his desire to travel to Syria to fight for IS.

He was arrested on March 19 by FBI agents at the Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport.

The psychological exam is meant to judge Masood's “competency to stand trial and assist in his defense,” according to the order. Masood's attorney has said the defendant does not understand the court proceedings.

Prosecutors say Masood was in the United States on a work visa. They allege in court documents that from January to March, Masood made several statements to paid informants pledging his allegiance to IS and its leader. He believed the informants were members of IS, they say.

Court documents do not name the clinic where Masood worked. The Mayo Clinic has confirmed that Masood formerly worked at the medical center, but said he was not employed there when he was arrested.

Based on reporting by AP

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