The Office of the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights yesterday rejected as “racist” and inciting xenophobia the reported remarks by US President Donald Trump describing immigrants from Africa and Haiti as coming from “shithole countries.”
Trump on Thursday questioned why the US would want to have immigrants from Haiti and African nations, referring to some as “shithole countries,” said two sources familiar with the comments made in the White House.
“These are shocking and shameful comments from the president of the United States. There is no other word one can use but ‘racist,’” office spokesman Rupert Colville told a news briefing when asked about the comments.
“You cannot dismiss entire countries and continents as ‘shitholes,’ whose entire populations, who are not white, are therefore not welcome,” he added.
The issue was more than “vulgar language,” Colville said. “It’s about opening the door to humanity’s worst side, about validating and encouraging racism and xenophobia that will potentially disrupt and destroy the lives of many people.”
Trump had also failed to clearly condemn the “anti-Semitic and racist actions of white supremacists in Charlottesville” at a rally in Virginia in August last year, Colville said.
The program that was being discussed at the White House is called temporary protected status.
In November last year, the Trump administration decided to end the status for immigrants from Haiti and Nicaragua. It gave the approximately 59,000 Haitian immigrants who had been granted the status until July next year to return home or legalize their presence in the US. Nicaraguans were given until January next year.
“The future of the Dreamers should not be used as a bargaining chip to negotiate the most severe and restrictive immigration and security measures possible. These are human beings, not commodities,” Colville said.
“Dreamers” is term used for undocumented immigrants who entered the US as children.
UN High Commissioner for Refugees spokesman William Spindler declined to comment directly on Trump’s purported remarks.
“What I can say is that UNHCR’s position is always that people forced to flee war or persecution, and needing asylum, should be given protection by whichever country they are in, irrespective of race, religion, ethnicity or place or country of origin,” Spindler said.
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