Trump's 'racist hate speech' fuelling rights abuses — UN watchdog

Trump's 'racist hate speech' fuelling rights abuses — UN watchdog

Trump's 'racist hate speech' fuelling rights abuses — UN watchdog

2026-03-11 18:43:43

Trump's 'Racist Hate Speech' is Fueling Rights Abuses

A UN watchdog has issued a dire warning that racist hate speech by US President Donald Trump and other political leaders, coupled with intensified immigration crackdowns, are fueling grave rights violations. The United Nations Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination (CERD) highlighted the growing racist hate speech targeting migrants, refugees, and asylum seekers in the United States. It also pointed to the use of derogatory and dehumanizing language and harmful stereotypes targeting the same people. These groups have been portrayed as criminals or as a burden, by politicians and influential public figures at the highest level of the state party, particularly its president, the group said in an urgent report. This fosters intolerance and may incite racial discrimination (and) hate crimes, it warned. The CERD also voiced grave concern over the systematic use of racial profiling by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and other officers deployed in Trump's immigration crackdown. The targeting of persons of Hispanic/Latino, African or Asian origin and arbitrary identity checks... have reportedly resulted in the widespread arrest of refugees, asylum seekers, migrants, and persons perceived as such, it said. At least 675,000 people had been deported since January 2025, when Trump returned to power, it noted. The CERD is composed of 18 independent experts tasked with monitoring how countries implement an international convention on eliminating racism. 'Excessive force' The committee noted that at least eight people had died since January during ICE operations or while in ICE custody. The CERD report followed an urgent submission from the American Civil Liberties Union in February asking it to investigate rights violations during the Trump administration's dramatic immigration crackdown in Minnesota and elsewhere. The committee called on Washington to ensure accountability, including by conducting effective, thorough, and impartial investigations into all alleged abuses. It also condemned the drastic increase in the number of detainees held at immigration detention facilities. The numbers reportedly rose from 40,000 in late 2024 to around 73,000 at the start of this year. It voiced concern too over reports of inhuman conditions and inadequate medical care in such facilities. The committee also expressed alarm at Washington's decision to rescind longstanding guidelines and policies limiting immigration enforcement operations and arrests near schools, hospitals, and faith-based institutions.


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Enjoy the little things in life. For one day, you may look back and realize they were the big things. Many of life's failures are people who did not realize how close they were to success when they gave up.

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