Outrage and Warnings of 'Ethnic Cleansing' as Trump Threatens Mass Raids Against Millions of People in the US
September 13, 2020 | News | No Comments
President Donald Trump said Monday night that his administration is preparing for a major assault on immigrant communities, a threat that triggered accusations of ethnic cleansing and increased fears over the long-term goals of the White House border agenda.
“First, children in concentration camps at the border. Now, ethnic cleansing.”
—Eric Holthaus
“Next week ICE will begin the process of removing the millions of illegal aliens who have illicitly found their way into the United States,” the president tweeted. “They will be removed as fast as they come in.”
The raids will specifically target families, The Washington Post reported Monday night:
“If they really do this,” tweeted Rolling Stone writer Jamil Smith, “it’ll be unimaginably horrific.”
The plan, reportedly developed by Trump and advisor Stephen Miller, the administration’s most enthusiastic anti-immigration voice, has been in the works for months. The plan was so controversial that it is believed to have played a role in the departure of then-Secretary of Homeland Security Kirstjen Nielsen from the administration in April, though, as Common Dreams reported at the time, Nielsen’s issue with the policy seemed purely based on effectiveness, not morality.
Azadeh Shahshahani, a Georgia-based immigration rights attorney, told Common Dreams Tuesday that immigration advocates would have to be prepared to do what was necessary to resist the planned assault on undocumented people and immigrant communities.
“Trump’s outrageous threats are meant to instill fear in immigrant communities and must be forcefully condemned,” said Shahshahani. “As Americans strongly protested heartless family separations last summer, we must continue to stand up to the white supremacist dictates of this administration and provide sanctuary to migrants fleeing persecution.”
In a statement provided to Common Dreams, ICE spokesperson Carl Rusnok framed the president’s directive as part of the agency’s mission.
“The border crisis doesn’t start and stop at the border, which is why ICE will continue to conduct interior enforcement without exemption for those who are in violation of federal immigration law,” said Rusnok. “This includes routine targeted enforcement operations, criminals, individuals subject to removal orders, and worksite enforcement. This is about addressing the border crisis by upholding the rule of law and maintaining the integrity of the immigration system, as created by Congress.”
The planned raids may be hamstrung by both a lack of capacity in the agency to fulfill the president’s directive and what The Atlantic writer Adam Serwer described on Tuesday as a lack of competence on the part of the administration.
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