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The manager of a trendy Manhattan Indian restaurant repeatedly complained that he “hated Indians” — even as he sexually harassed an Indian server there, a pair of new lawsuits allege.

Boss Paul Wijayabandara, who still works at hip Baar Baar on East 1st Street, is “proudly” racist against the very culture that the restaurant is based on, according to one of two lawsuits filed in Manhattan civil court Friday against Baar Baar’s parent company RSVP Hospitality LLC.

“He hates his own customers,” Mehmood Qureshi told The Post, whose lawsuit claims that Wijayabandara called Indians “the worst tippers” and complained that they were “always giving us problems.”

“Paul explained that he is from Sri Lanka, which, in his opinion, made him far superior to Indians,” the court filing claims.

Despite his alleged discrimination, Wijayabandara crudely hit on Qureshi, a Singapore native of Indian descent, according to his suit, which was filed alongside another from a female staffer also accusing the biased boss of sexual harassment.

Wijayabandara “leered” at Qureshi, telling him he had “to make me happy” and asking, “Do you like it in the front or back?” the suit alleges.

The manager also bragged that he could fire Qureshi “anytime” if he spurned his advances — with Qureshi claiming he was locked in a room, threatened, and then had his hours reduced when he first lawyered up.

“I was very uncomfortable working there while all this was going on,” Qureshi, 50, who still works at Baar Baar alongside the boss he is suing, told The Post.

“It’s still stressful. They stare. I know they are talking about me and they have told other staff not to talk to me,” said Qureshi, whose suit also claims a chef grabbed his butt and groin without consent.

Female server Karla Calderon, 37, made similar harassment complaints against Wijayabandara in a second lawsuit filed Friday by the same law firm repping Qureshi.

The general manager often asked Calderon to dance for him, commented on her breast size and made dirty jokes and asides — finally firing her in May because she rebuffed his advances, her suit alleges.

“The only reason [I was fired] is because it was obvious that I didn’t want to go out with him or play his nasty games or dance for him in private,” the Bronx woman told The Post.

“I just want justice. He needs to learn to respect people.”

Both workers are seeking damages from RSVP Hospitality.

“The owners of this restaurant have a blatant disregard for their staff and customers as it is still going on today to other staff members,” said their lawyer, prominent workplace-discrimination attorney Matthew Blit. “My clients are now ready to serve justice.”

Wijayabandara claimed ignorance and threatened to call the police when The Post sought comment from him at Baar Baar on Sunday.

Payal Sharma, who owns RSVP Hospitality, could not be reached for comment. Her husband, Rajiv Sharma — a consultant for the group — said the accusers cooked up phony allegations in search of a payday.

“Baar Baar and RSVP Hospitality has never had any issue with harassment [or] discrimination. We are open to all races, all kinds of people come here. And we are primarily Indians,” Rajiv said. “You’re talking of two dishonest employees who are trying to extort money from this restaurant.”