<Anchor>



Amidst hate crimes targeting Asians in the United States are on the rise, damage from Koreans continues.

“Don't ask, assaulted” on the street, and there were also riots at convenience stores run by Koreans.

The Korean people's anxiety is also growing.



This news is from the Washington correspondent Yunsoo Kim. 



<Reporter>



A man in a red top rushes toward the couple passing by on the street.



I want to tell my husband something, and then I start swinging my fists.



[Oh, don't do it.

Do not.

Help me

Help!] A



couple of Korean victims in their 50s were attacked in Tacoma, Washington, USA in November last year.



My husband broke a rib when he was'don't ask but assaulted' by people who didn't even have one side.



The police arrested a 15-year-old boy who was perpetrated in four months and handed it over to trial through an assault video posted on social media recently.



On the 30th of last month, a'iron bar riot' took place at a convenience store operated by a Korean in Charlotte, North Carolina.



A young man entered the store and smashed the store's items, such as refrigerators and shelves, swinging an iron bar.



[Sung Yeol-moon/Convenience store owner: He swears at us and just took a reinforcing bar'Chinese, go back to your country' and started swinging it for 6-7 minutes.

We were all terrified.]



A 24-year-old young man who committed a riot was arrested by the police at the scene.



The police believe that it may be a hate crime because the criminal did not steal things.



Amidst the successive hate crimes, a survey shows that Asians in the United States are often reluctant to report hate crimes.