If you were under the impression that ethnic cleansing takes place only in other countries with maniacal dictators, perhaps it is time to reflect on the recent behavior of President Trump in regards to recovery efforts in Puerto Rico following Hurricane Maria. By some accounts, the disaster recovery in Puerto Rico was a clear example of the deliberate and prolonged neglect of a large segment of U.S. citizens.
An estimated 3,000 Puerto Rican
residents died as a result of Hurricane Maria – not just from the immediate storm
but also from the inadequate recovery efforts that allowed too many victims to
suffer from the limited access to clean water, food, transportation and medical
attention. The level of human misery in Puerto Rico, which continues to this
day, was apparently of little consequence to President Trump who boasted that
the recovery effort was one of the most successful in U.S. history. Making matters worse, President Trump even now
rejects the estimate of 3,000 deaths from Hurricane Maria, suggesting that the
high death estimate was merely a political ploy by Democrats to “make me look
bad.”
Trump’s suggestion that the 3,000
deaths resulting from Hurricane Maria was a political ploy by Democrats is
consistent with other conspiracy theories that point to his detachment from
reality, including such things as:
·
Promotion of the birther theory regarding
President Obama;
·
The claim that Muslims celebrated 9/11 on rooftops;
·
Suggesting that Ted Cruz’s father was involved
in the JFK assassination; and
·
Claiming that 3 to 5 million illegal votes were
cast in the 2016 election.
President Trump has made no secret
of his disdain for Puerto Rico and its leadership, even delaying the waiver of
the Jones Act to expedite the delivery of needed resources. Indeed, his disdain
for other non-white and immigrant groups has been shown through statements and
policies, including the separation of Latino children from their families; legal action to end the DACA program; travel restrictions based on religious
beliefs; and the consistent derogatory statements
made in reference to Mexicans, Haitians,
black athletes, and war heroes like the late Senator McCain. More recently, the Trump administration
announced the transfer of $10 million from the FEMA budget to ICE -- an action that further underscores the
priority placed on the removal of unwanted groups. Perhaps it is time to ask: Is President Trump
developing a program of ethnic cleansing?
As defined by a United Nations
Commission, ethnic cleansing is defined as follows:
“….rendering an area ethnically homogeneous by using force or
intimidation to remove persons of given groups from the area… a purposeful policy
designed by one ethnic or religious group to remove by violent and
terror-inspiring means the civilian population of another ethnic or religious
group from certain geographic areas. “
Since he became president, Donald
Trump has implemented a number of programs that could fall under this
definition of ethnic cleansing, including
arbitrary arrest and detention; confinement
in ghetto areas (i.e., families in detention centers); forcible removal; displacement and deportation (i.e., even
asylum seekers); deliberate attacks or
threats of attacks on civilians (i.e., especially protestors at campaign
rallies); and robbery of personal property (that is, seizure of personal
property from forcibly removed persons).
Although
Trump has yet to implement some of the most coercive practices that have been
utilized globally by current and past dictators, following is a listing of the various
practices that have been used to achieve the objectives of ethnic cleansing:
- Murder
- Torture
- Extrajudicial executions
- Rape and sexual assaults
- Severe physical injury to civilians
- Use of civilians as human shields
- Destruction of property
- Attacks on hospitals, medical personnel and locations with the Red Cross/Red Crescent emblem, among others.
Without intervention by legal
advocates and human rights organizations, one wonders how many of these most coercive
practices President Trump would implement given the opportunity and growing support
by his conservative base. Yet, the
withholding and delay of needed emergency assistance and the resulting 3,000
deaths of Puerto Rican citizens presents tangible evidence that President Trump
has added a new dimension to the ethnic cleansing formula.
Apparently, it is not enough to
separate families, deport asylum seekers, place immigrant children in detention
centers, and publicly disparage immigrants and non-whites – it now appears
acceptable to simply delay or withhold emergency assistance in order to punish
or remove unwanted segments of the U.S. population. To say the least, this is a disturbing
development and made equally frightening by the many “pro-life” Republicans who
choose to remain silent on this issue.
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