Washington: Foreign Secretary S Jaishankar said on Saturday that the Kansas shooting, in which an Indian engineer was killed, should be treated as an "individual act" and the American society was very much against it.
Jaishankar, who along with the Commerce Secretary Rita Teotia, held a series of meetings with top officials of the Trump's administration and Congressional leaders, said the tragic incident in Kansas featured in many of their discussions.
"What we heard from very high-level, Cabinet level that we should regard this as an act of an individual. Two, the American justice system was at work, it could bring the perpetrators of this act to justice. It is being prosecuted as a hate crime," Jaishankar said.
"What we have seen in the last few days, whether it is White House statement, or President's reference to it in his address to the Congress or what the (House) Speaker said after he met us...Almost everybody we met, even people perhaps whose responsibility did not directly deal with this, we heard expressions of deep sorrow, deep regret and a sense of that we should really treat this as an individual act. And the American system and the American society was very much against it," he said.
The incident, which is being investigated as a hate crime by the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), has sent shockwaves among the Indian-American across the country.
Members of the community met Kansas Governor Sam Brownback seeking his assurance in protection of Indian-Americans in the State.
Several Indian-Americans from in and around Washington DC and its suburb gathered at Dupont Circle in the national capital to hold a candle light vigil in memory of Indian engineer Srinivas Kuchibhotla, 32, who was shot dead in Kansas City last week.
"Every tragedy brings us Americans closer. We as a nation have always risen from adversities and we stand together this evening to make sure that we don't lose another American to hate or violence. It does not matter what your race, religion or colour is. We all bleed the same," said Indian-American Republican leader from Virginia Puneet Ahluwalia.
Utsav Chakrabarti of the World Hindu Council said the tragic incident shows the need for an honest discourse at grassroots level about the fact that radical Islam is a religious ideology, not a "racial identity", because continued normalisation of the latter, perpetuates such heinous and barbaric hate crimes against "people of colour" including Hindus and Sikhs.
"Srinu would have been 33, six days from now on March 9, had he not fallen victim to blind hate on that dark and deadly night of February 3 in Kansas. A gentle Hindu life cut short because of bigotry," said Ahmar Khan in his remarks.
Stay informed on all the latest news, real-time breaking news updates, and follow all the important headlines in india news and world News on Zee News.