TRUMP MEETS VICTIMS OF RELIGIOUS PERSECUTION AT
WHITE HOUSE
President Donald Trump
listens to Ambassador-at-Large for International Religious Freedom Sam
Brownback, standing right center, as he meets with survivors of religious
persecution in the Oval Office of the White House, July 17, 2019.President
Donald Trump listens to Ambassador-at-Large for International Religious Freedom
Sam Brownback, standing right center, as he meets with survivors of religious
persecution in the Oval Office of the White House, July 17, 2019.U.S. President
Donald Trump, who has made religious freedom a centerpiece of his foreign
policy, met Wednesday with victims of religious persecution from countries like
China, Turkey, North Korea, Iran and Myanmar.
Trump counts
evangelical Christians among his core supporters and the State Department is
hosting a conference on the topic this week that will be attended by Vice
President Mike Pence and Secretary of State Mike Pompeo.Four of the 27
participants in the Oval Office meeting were from China, the White House said:
Jewher Ilham, an Uighur Muslim; Yuhua Zhang, a Falun Gong practitioner; Nyima
Lhamo, a Tibetan Buddhist; and Manping Ouyang, a Christian.
The Trump
administration has been weighing sanctions against Chinese officials over the
treatment of the Uighurs, including the Communist Party chief of Xinjiang, Chen
Quanguo, but has so far held back amid Chinese threats of retaliation.Relations
between the United States and China are already tense over a tit-for-tat trade
war, with the United States alleging that China engages in unfair trading
practices.Reuters reported in May that the U.S. administration was considering
sanctions on Chinese video surveillance firm Hikvision over the country’s
treatment of its Uighur minority, citing a person briefed on the matter.Nearly
two dozen nations at the U.N. Human Rights Council this week urged China to
halt persecution of ethnic Uighurs in Xinjiang, where U.N. experts and
activists say at least 1 million are held in detention centers.The Chinese
government has traditionally rejected any suggestion that it abuses religious
rights and human rights.
Also present at the
meeting were Rohingya Muslims from Myanmar, the White House said. On Tuesday,
Pompeo announced sanctions against Myanmar military’s Commander-in-Chief Min
Aung Hlaing and other leaders it said were responsible for extrajudicial
killings of Rohingya in 2017, barring them from entry to the United States.Trump’s
ambassador for religious freedom, Sam Brownback, said during Wednesday’s
meeting that the administration would announce “additional measures” on
religious freedom at the State Department meeting Thursday.Among the other
victims who met with Trump were Christians from Myanmar, Vietnam, North Korea,
Iran, Turkey, Cuba, Eritrea, Nigeria and Sudan; Muslims from Afghanistan,
Sudan, Pakistan and New Zealand; Jews from Yemen and Germany; a practitioner of
Cao Dai from Vietnam; and a Yezidi from Iraq.
Prof. John Kurakar
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