WASHINGTON – Police were investigating a possible hate crime after two men said they were attacked by assailants who used a homophobic slur and referenced the monkeypox virus.

The men told police they were were walking down the street in the district’s Shaw neighborhood Sunday when the suspects approached them, called them an anti-gay slur and referred to monkeypox, according to an incident report. The suspects then punched the two men “several times” and broke one victim’s sunglasses, the report said.

The incident comes after the Biden administration declared monkeypox a public health emergency this month. More than 9,400 cases have been confirmed in the U.S. Monkeypox comes from the same family of viruses as smallpox and is transmitted through person-to-person contact. Though the majority of cases are among men who have sex with men, experts have stressed it is not a sexually transmitted infection.

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Washington police were investigating the attack as “potentially being motivated by hate or bias,” according to a news release. The department released photos of two persons of interest Tuesday. No arrests have been made. 

Police said the two men were treated at the hospital. 

Combating the stigma associated with monkeypox is everyone’s responsibility, said Christopher Vasquez, director of communications for the National Center for Lesbian Rights, a national LGBTQ legal organization. 

“It’s incumbent on everybody right now to do the best that they can” to ensure that gay and bisexual men and transgender people aren’t singled out as the reason for the outbreak, Vasquez said.

In a statement Tuesday, Mayor Muriel Bowser said she was “extremely disturbed” by the report. The Metropolitan Police Department’s LGBT Liaison Unit is assisting in the investigation, she said.