Two brothers who recently immigrated to the Bronx from Senegal, West Africa allegedly were beaten and badly injured by several students who called them “Ebola” in school, an advocacy group reported.
The boys, who are in sixth and eighth grade, were attacked by their peers at I.S. 318 in the Bronx, New York, last Friday according to the African Advisory Council of the Bronx. The incident occurred a day after the city’s first case of Ebola was reported, when Dr. Craig Spencer tested positive for the virus following his Doctors Without Borders trip to Guinea.
The boys, who arrived in the United States last month, were taken to the hospital with severe injuries.
Their father, Ousame Drame, told NBC News New York that his sons “were pummeled by other students in the schoolyard during lunch after enduring weeks of taunts.” Instead of blaming the students for their actions, though, he called on school administrators to protect his and other children. The boys will return to school, but Drame wants confirmation they will be safe, both emotionally and physically, the local NBC affiliate reported.
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