But who is he? And what happened next?
The young man is 20-year-old Malaysian accounting student Mohammad Asyraf Haziq, who was cycling with a friend in east London on Monday to a gathering to break his fast for the Muslim holy month of Ramadan, according to a friend, Dzuhair Hanafiah.
The details of his trip are as chilling as the video.
First, a group of about 20 teens and pre-teens surrounded him. Then they grabbed his bike, took his cell phone and broke his jaw, Dzuhair told AP on Wednesday.
"The next thing he remembered, his mouth was full of blood," said Dzuhair, a member of the London Umno club, a society for Malaysian students. "He was just left there."
The video of the attack on Mohammad Asyraf went viral Tuesday and has become one of the most memorable scenes from four days of unrest.
So shocking was the robbing of an injured man that Prime Minister David Cameron felt moved to describe it as a sign of a deeper societal malaise in Britain.
"There are pockets of our society that are not just broken but frankly sick," Cameron told reporters in somber statement Wednesday.
"When we see children as young as 12 and 13 looting and laughing, when we see the disgusting sight of an injured young man with people pretending to help him while they are robbing him, it is clear that there are things that are badly wrong with our society."
Dzuhair said Mohammad Asyraf was helped by a local woman who brought him into her home. Using Facebook, she was able to help him contact a friend and helped him until he could get to the hospital.
"His face is swollen, but he's all right," he said. "He's in good spirits."
Mohammad Asyraf has a broken jaw and is unable to talk.
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