BBC Homepage
  • Skip to content
  • Accessibility Help
  • Your account
  • Notifications
  • Home
  • News
  • Sport
  • Weather
  • iPlayer
  • Sounds
  • Bitesize
  • CBBC
  • CBeebies
  • Food
  • More menu
More menu
Search BBC
  • Home
  • News
  • Sport
  • Weather
  • iPlayer
  • Sounds
  • Bitesize
  • CBBC
  • CBeebies
  • Food
Close menu
BBC News
Menu
  • Home
  • InDepth
  • Israel-Gaza war
  • War in Ukraine
  • Climate
  • UK
  • World
  • Business
  • Politics
  • Culture
More
  • Tech
  • Science
  • Health
  • Family & Education
  • In Pictures
  • Newsbeat
  • BBC Verify
  • Disability
  • Trending

#BBCtrending: The racist video that's shocked Australia

  • Published
    4 July 2014
Share page
About sharing
A screengrab from a YouTube video show shows a woman making a slitty eye gestureImage source, KAREEM ABDUL
BBC Trending
What's popular and why

Police in Australia have charged a woman after a video was uploaded to YouTube showing her hurling racist abuse at passengers on a train near Sydney.

Racially offensive gestures, mocking of accents, referring to a woman as a "gook". The three-and-a-half minute video is packed with racist abuse. It was uploaded to YouTube on Wednesday by one of the passengers who filmed it on the train. The video begins with the woman expressing her anger that some children have not given up their seats to let her sit down.

She then starts abusing a woman she calls an "Asian", and a man she assumes is the woman's boyfriend. "Look at this bogan here," she says, using an Australian slang term similar to "white trash". "He can only get a gook, he can't even get a regular girlfriend. It's so sad." "Gook" is a derogatory term which came to prominence when used by American soldiers in the Vietnam war.

The video has been watched more than 280,000 times and prompted more than 1,000 comments on YouTube - as well as discussion on Twitter and Facebook. "Good on those train passengers for filming that incident," tweeted, external Australia's Race Discrimination Commissioner Tim Soutphommasane. "It's one way we can hold people accountable for racist abuse." In the video, several of the passengers are seen to challenge the woman directly for her behaviour.

Tweet which reads "Woman facing charges over racist Sydney train tirade, but outrage from so many decent Aussies is great to see."Image source, @colinjevons

Most commenting on Twitter were strong in their condemnation. "Wow, just wow #OnlyinAustralia #Disgracetothehumanrace," was one tweet, external for example. "I love it when technology brings transparency and accountability. This racist will rightly be shamed publically," was another., external

Under Australia's Racial Discrimination Act, external, it is against the law to "offend, insult, humiliate or intimidate" someone because of their ethnicity or race. But the government is currently debating whether to repeal this section of the act. The plan is controversial, external, and some made reference to the proposal while discussing the video.

On YouTube, some defended the woman. "Can't blame her... migrants come here and think they own the place," was one comment. But many Australians apologised for her actions. "This woman does not represent the views of MOST Australians," wrote one. "Sorry for anyone offended, she is an entire nation's shame."

The Australian website ninemsns says it has tracked down the woman in the video. In an interview with them, external, she said she'd had a "really, really rotten day". She apologised for her actions and said she was "disgusted" at her behaviour. "No-one deserves to be spoken to like that," she said.

This is not the first time that racism in Australia has come to public attention. In June 2013 a woman was captured on video racially abusing an Asian schoolboy on a Sydney bus. Earlier that year, Malaysian-Australian newsreader Jeremy Fernandez tweeted about "15 minutes of racial abuse" he was subjected to on a bus.

You can follow BBC Trending on Twitter @BBCtrending, external

All our stories are at bbc.com/trending

Top stories

  • Energy bills to rise by more than expected ahead of winter

    • Published
      30 minutes ago
  • Four ways to keep your energy bills down

    • Published
      52 minutes ago
  • Denmark summons top US diplomat over alleged Greenland influence operation

    • Published
      2 hours ago

More to explore

  • How achievable is Reform's plan on migration?

    Both are smiling and holding up signed copies of their new policy. The document pictures a plane coming to land on a runway, and reads Operation Restoring Justice. Behind them is the top left corner of a large union jack, that is the backdrop to where they are standing.
  • Where does blame lie for Celtic's Champions League exit?

    • Attribution
      Sport
    Brendan Rodgers in Kazakhstan
  • Taylor's engaged - what we learned and the new details revealed by Travis's dad

    A screenshot taken from Instagram showing Travis Kelce and Taylor Swift hug each other
  • Trump's brand of US capitalism faces 'socialist' backlash from conservatives

    A mobile device displaying the Intel logo appears in front of a blurry US flag
  • SpaceX pulls off Starship rocket launch in much-needed comeback

    A rocket takes off with smoke and fire coming out the bottom illuminating the bottom orange
  • Wildlife Photographer of the Year 2025 – the best pictures so far

    A black and white image of three young cheetahs holding a Günther’s dik-dik in their mouths.
  • Princess Diana 90s time capsule contains Kylie CD and pocket TV

    Princess Diana, wearing a blue Chanel suit, speaks to a young girl playing with play-doh. The girl, who is looking at Diana, is wearing a floral jumper and has a sphere of play-doh in her hands.
  • 'I thought it was the end of my life': Inside Israel's attack on Iran's Evin Prison

    A man stands pointing upwards in the impact site of one of Israel's missiles on the administrative building at Evin Prison, where a large number of people were killed
  • The battle to save China's rare snub-nosed monkey

    A baby monkey
loading elsewhere stories

Most read

  1. 1

    Parents of teenager who took his own life sue OpenAI

  2. 2

    Wildlife Photographer of the Year 2025 – the best pictures so far

  3. 3

    Four ways to keep your energy bills down

  4. 4

    Denmark summons top US diplomat over alleged Greenland influence operation

  5. 5

    Scottish island castle goes back on sale for £750,000

  6. 6

    What difference will marriage make to Taylor Swift's music?

  7. 7

    Energy bills to rise by more than expected ahead of winter

  8. 8

    Mum's anger after funeral director keeps baby's body at home

  9. 9

    Lil Nas X says he's OK after 'terrifying' arrest

  10. 10

    Conservative MSP Graham Simpson defects to Reform

BBC News Services

  • On your mobile
  • On smart speakers
  • Get news alerts
  • Contact BBC News

Best of the BBC

  • The world’s deadliest offshore disaster revisited

    • Attribution
      iPlayer
    Disaster at Sea: The Piper Alpha Story
  • The rise and fall of a British religious cult

    • Attribution
      Sounds
  • A sweeping historical drama with James Norton

    • Attribution
      iPlayer
    King and Conqueror
  • Ian Wright remembers his inspirational teacher

    • Attribution
      Sounds
    Desert Island Discs Postcards
  • Home
  • News
  • Sport
  • Weather
  • iPlayer
  • Sounds
  • Bitesize
  • CBBC
  • CBeebies
  • Food
  • Terms of Use
  • About the BBC
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookies
  • Accessibility Help
  • Parental Guidance
  • Contact the BBC
  • Make an editorial complaint
  • BBC emails for you

Copyright © 2025 BBC. The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites. Read about our approach to external linking.