An Egyptian NYPD sergeant claims in a lawsuit his superiors and fellow cops berated him with slurs — including one officer telling him to “go back to where you belong.”

The veteran cop — 54-year-old Kappa Farid — alleges in his recently amended federal lawsuit Deputy Inspector Kenneth Noonan was one of the cops who would “regularly” mock the sergeant — including forcing him to stay silent during team meetings because of his Arabic accent.

“Noonan’s conduct was extreme and outrageous and is utterly intolerable in a civilized community,” the suit says.

Noonan also allegedly physically threatened Farid — in one intense phone call, the precinct commander yelled “I will f— you up,” according to the suit.

An NYPD spokesman told The Post, the department “takes these allegations extremely seriously, and there is no place in the Department for this type of behavior.”

The suit claims Sgt. John Tuscano would say to Farid, “You have to learn how to speak English,” and you are “speaking gibberish.”

Another officer — only identified as Officer Gorman and not named as a defendant — allegedly called Farid a “sand monkey” and told him to “go back to where you belong.”

The July 24 amended complaint, filed in Brooklyn federal court, is seeking $17 million.

“The NYPD had launched an aggressive investigation into these allegations, but as a result of City policy, the matter is now under review by the EEOC,” the spokesman said. “The NYPD continues to monitor the situation closely, and is prepared to take additional corrective action as needed.”