He also didn’t to have any ideas
about how to help, except he didn’t really seem to care
Trump seems to be thinking about something else. Maybe how Kim Kardasian wants him to get rapper A$AP Rocky out of a "brutal"Swedish jail where he is being held on assault charges. |
In a meeting with victims of
religious persecution on Wednesday, President Donald Trump repeatedly appeared
to be unaware of many of the world’s most pressing humanitarian crises.
Trump met with more than two dozen
survivors of religious conflict, a few of whom told their stories — and made
impassioned entreaties for aid — directly to the president.
As he asked
questions of his guests, the president seemed to reveal a stark lack of
familiarity with the fundamental details of problems faced by Rohingya in
Myanmar, Uighurs in China, and Yazidis in Iraq — groups in crisis that his own
administration has established positions and policies on.
No empathy. Not even eye contact. No clue. No plan. |
On multiple occasions, Trump asked
refugees among the group where the conflicts they were fleeing were taking
place.
Mohib Ullah, a Rohingya man who had
escaped violence in Myanmar, explained that he was staying in a refugee camp in
neighboring Bangladesh and asked the president what his plans are to help his
beleaguered people.
Trump replied by asking, “And where is that, exactly? Where?”
Trump replied by asking, “And where is that, exactly? Where?”
The president replied, “Thank you,
appreciate it,” and moved on without ever answering Ullah’s question.
The Trump administration’s official
position is that Myanmar has engaged in “ethnic cleansing” of the Rohingya, a
long-persecuted Muslim minority group, and it has imposed multiple rounds of sanctions on
its military leaders for their human rights abuses.
In fact, just one day before Trump’s
meeting, the administration announced new sanctions barring
military leaders from Myanmar from entering the US because of their
extrajudicial killings of Rohingya.
Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said
the new sanctions were being levied because he and the rest of the
administration “remain concerned that the Burmese government has taken no
actions to hold accountable those responsible for human rights violations and
abuses, and there are continued reports of the Burmese military committing
human rights violations and abuses throughout the country.”
Trump, however, did not mention
these sanctions to Ullah, and based on his questions, did not appear to be
overly familiar with the conflict between the Rohingya and the government and
military of Myanmar in the first place.
Trump also seemed almost entirely
unacquainted with the oppression of Uighurs, China’s
predominantly Muslim minority.
When Jewher Ilham, a Uighur woman,
said that millions of her people have been locked up in “concentration camps”
and that she hadn’t seen her detained father since 2013, Trump again replied as
if he was hearing about the crisis for the first time.
“Where is that? Where is that in
China?” he asked.
After Ilham explained that Uighurs
live in western China in the Xinjiang province,
Trump proceeded to ask her how long her father had been gone, even though Ilham
had told him in her introduction.
After a brief back-and-forth about
how often Ilham communicated with her father, Trump declared, “That’s tough
stuff,” and moved on.
China treats its entire Uighur
population as a national security threat and has established one of the most high-tech and invasive surveillance
regimes in the world to regulate it.
The Pentagon has described the mass detainment of
Uighurs as “concentration camps,” and they have been a major point of tension
between the US and China as they navigate trade talks — Chinese President Xi Jinping has
reportedly asked the US remain silent on the camps should the Trump
administration like its trade talks to with China to be successful.
The president also had an awkward
exchange with Nadia Murad, a Yazidi refugee from Iraq who escaped captivity by
ISIS. Trump again did not appear to pay close attention to her testimony,
asking Murad where her family members were right after she’d told the president
they had been killed.
Trump tried to steer the
conversation toward the topic of ISIS no longer being in Sinjar, a town that
has long been the home to the Yazidi ethnic and religious minority,
but Murad explained that ISIS wasn’t the issue. Instead, she explained Yazidi
refugees are afraid to return because of security and political concerns.
“You had the Nobel Prize?”
Donald Trump learns of Yazidi activist Nadia Murad. Here’s how the interaction
unfolded....
“Now there is no ISIS, but we cannot
go back because Kurdish government and the Iraqi government, they are fighting
each other who will control my area,” she said. “And we cannot go back, if we
cannot protect our dignity, our family.”
“But now ISIS is gone. Now it’s
Kurdish and who?” Trump asked.
Murad again explained that security
forces are of concern to her people. There have been reports of skirmishes in the Yazidi homeland as
the Iraqi government works to retake control from militias and the remnants of
US-backed Kurdish forces.
After Murad elaborated on safety
concerns, Trump pivoted, asking her about the Nobel Peace Prize she was awarded
in 2018 — Murad was given the prize for her advocacy for the Yazidis.
The group
was attacked by ISIS in 2014; several thousand were killed, and more than 3,000
others were taken as slaves, including sex slaves.
The activist told the president she
was given the prize for speaking out about her time as a slave, and her escape
from bondage, as well as her work on behalf of the thousands of Yazidi women
raped by ISIS troops.
“Let me look; we’re going to look,”
Trump responded.
Ultimately the timing of the
meeting, intended to project an image of the Trump administration’s dedication
to protecting refugees persecuted for their religions, was rather ironic.
Immediately afterwards, the
president attended a rally and whipped up xenophobic anger at
perhaps the most prominent refugee in American politics, herself a US religious
minority.
And the next day, Politico reported that security officials
in the Trump administration are considering cutting refugee admissions “to
nearly zero” next year.