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Vendor beaten up during NYC pride event, allegedly for refusing to replace American flag with pride flag

A food vendor who said he was attacked by New York City Pride revelers over the weekend told the New York Post that the incident started after he refused to replace the American flag on his food cart with a rainbow Pride flag.

Nader Hassaneen, 65, alleged that a woman took a U.S flag from the cart he was helping at on Sunday night outside Washington Square Park in Manhattan and demanded that it be replaced with a pride flag. When Hassaneen refused, he said, he was punched in the back of the head and beaten — an attack that left him disoriented and bloody. He was able to capture part of the brutal attack on video.

“I was videotaping it and telling her she shouldn’t do that,” Hassaneen told the Post in an interview this week. “My friend asked her, ‘Why did you do that?’” The Post noted that the woman did not answer, but that “one of the assailants threw the hot sauce and all hell broke loose.” “I have a broken nose. They say I might need surgery. When I saw the blood in my cap and I was bleeding from my nose, I thought I was going to bleed to death,” he said adding that, “I’m never going back there.” “I felt safe because the cops were around. There were about 30 or 40 cops near the arch,” Hassaneen told the Post, “but I was scared when they came at me. There were a lot of people coming at me at the same time.”

The vendors’ story differs from other accounts of the attack. Police officers who were on the scene told the Post that the fight broke out because of a disagreement over listed food prices. A videographer that is affiliated with the Pride revelers claimed that one of the vendors used an “anti-gay slur” triggering the beatdown. Hassaneen said that he did not use an anti-gay slur and that he was just at the park to sell food, not tangle with customers.

ARTICLE: PAUL MURDOCH

MANAGING EDITOR: CARSON CHOATE
PHOTO CREDITS: DAILY MAIL

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Paul, 37, is from Scotland in the UK, but currently lives and works in Bangkok. Paul has worked in different industries such as telemarketing, retail, hospitality, farming, insurance, and teaching, where he works now. He teaches at an all-girls High School in Bangkok. “It’s a lot of work, but I love my job.” Paul has an active interest in politics. His reason for writing for FBA is to offer people the facts and allow them to make up their own minds. Whilst he believes opinion columns have their place, it is also important that people can have accurate news with no bias.

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