logo
U.S. added to int'l human rights watchlist

U.S. added to int'l human rights watchlist

Yahoo12-05-2025

May 11 (UPI) -- The United States was added to an international human rights watchlist on Sunday over Trump administration attacks targeting civic freedoms.
CIVICUS, an international human rights monitor, said it added the United States due to "the Trump administration's assault on democratic norms and global cooperation."
As reason, it listed President Donald Trump's "unprecedented executive orders designed to unravel democratic institutions, rule of law and global cooperation" as well as its slashing of federal funding for organizations supporting those in need, the dismantling of USAID and reversals on justice, inclusion and diversity.
It also highlighted the Trump administration's crackdown on pro-Palestine protests through arbitrary arrests and student visa cancelations
"This is an unparalleled attack on the rule of law in the United States, not seen since the days of McCarthyism in the 20th century," Mandeep Tiwana, interim co-secretary general of CIVICUS, said in a statement.
"Restrictive orders, unjustifiable institutional cutbacks and intimidation tactics through threatening pronouncements by senior officials in the administration are creating an atmosphere to chill democratic dissent, a cherished American ideal."
The United States being added to the watchlist comes as the Trump administration has come under mounting criticism over its attacks on American democratic institutions.
It has been accused of ignoring due process rights in arresting and shipping hundreds of migrants to a notorious mega prison in El Salvador and has been condemned for its repeated attacks of the judicial system -- from calling for judges who rule against it to be impeached to arresting another on allegations of impeding an immigration-related arrest.
CIVICUS also highlight the Trump administration's attacks on press freedom as reason for its inclusion the list.
It pointed to the White House now determining which media outlets have access to presidential briefings and banning reporters covering political sensitive topics as proof.
"The Trump administration seems hellbent on dismantling the system of checks and balances, which are the pillars of a democratic society," Tiwana said.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Family of Colorado attack suspect taken into ICE custody
Family of Colorado attack suspect taken into ICE custody

CNN

time32 minutes ago

  • CNN

Family of Colorado attack suspect taken into ICE custody

Federal agencies CrimeFacebookTweetLink Follow The family of the Egyptian national charged with attempted murder after an antisemitic Molotov cocktail attack in Colorado has been taken into ICE custody and are being processed, a DHS official confirmed to CNN Tuesday. The suspected attacker, Mohamed Soliman, has a wife and five children, according to court filings. It remains unclear what the family members' US immigration status is and whether the whole family was taken into custody. This is a developing story and will be updated.

COVID-related agreement continues to shield some on Georgia's death row from execution
COVID-related agreement continues to shield some on Georgia's death row from execution

Associated Press

time36 minutes ago

  • Associated Press

COVID-related agreement continues to shield some on Georgia's death row from execution

ATLANTA (AP) — The fact that the COVID-19 vaccine is not available for newborn babies is shielding a group of prisoners on Georgia's death row from execution. Executions in Georgia were halted during the COVID-19 pandemic, and the state attorney general's office entered into an agreement with lawyers for people on death row to set the terms under which they could resume for a specific group of prisoners. At least one of those conditions, having to do with the availability of the COVID-19 vaccine, has not been met, and seeking an execution date for a prisoner covered by the agreement would breach the agreement, Fulton County Superior Court Judge Shukura Ingram ruled. The agreement includes three conditions that had to be met before executions could be set for the affected prisoners: the expiration of the state's COVID-19 judicial emergency, the resumption of normal visitation at state prisons and the availability of a COVID-19 vaccine 'to all members of the public.' Once those conditions were met, the state agreed to give three months' notice before pursuing an execution warrant for one of the prisoners covered by the agreement and six months' notice for the rest. The state has argued that the agreement should no longer apply, contending the conditions have been met. But defense attorneys say it's still valid because the vaccine isn't yet available to infants under 6 months old, and visitation at state prisons has not returned to normal. Ingram's ruling, issued Friday, addressed only the vaccination question. She plans to handle the visitation issue separately. Ingram wrote that the state's arguments 'all boil down to an attempt to rewrite the Agreement.' The state is '(u)nhappy with the language it drafted' and wants to change it so that the condition would be satisfied once vaccines are available to 'most members of the public.' 'But courts cannot rewrite contracts to relieve a party of their regrets,' she wrote. She ruled that the agreement is 'binding and enforceable,' that the vaccination condition hasn't been met and that seeking an execution warrant before the requirements have been met would breach the agreement. The state attorney general's office plans to appeal, a spokesperson said Tuesday. Ingram noted that the Food and Drug Administration has approved clinical trials for infants under 6 months old, and newborns receive other vaccines. That shows it is possible for the COVID-19 vaccine to ultimately be available for that age group, and the state should have foreseen that that could take years, she wrote. Experts for both sides had testified that it was probable that the COVID-19 vaccine would eventually become available to babies under the age of 6 months, Ingram wrote. That was before Robert F. Kennedy Jr. was appointed U.S. health secretary. Kennedy last week announced that COVID-19 vaccines are no longer recommended for healthy children and pregnant women. A few days later, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's website, which had said those groups should get the shots, was revised to say the vaccinations 'may' be given to those groups. The agreement covers fewer than 10 of the 34 people currently on Georgia's death row. While Georgia stopped carrying out executions during the pandemic, death penalty cases continued to wind their way through the court system, and as people exhausted their appeals, they became eligible for execution. A committee of a judicial task force on COVID-19 in early 2021 instructed lawyers for people on death row and the state attorney general's office to come up with terms under which executions could safely resume. The two sides reached the agreement in April 2021. The agreement only applied to people on death row whose requests to have their appeals reheard were denied by the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals while the judicial emergency was in place. The agreement was to remain in effect through Aug. 1, 2022, or one year from the date on which the conditions were met — whichever was later. The legal fight arose from a lawsuit filed when officials set a May 2022 execution date for Virgil Delano Presnell Jr. The Federal Defender Program, which represents Presnell, said the state had violated the agreement because the conditions hadn't all been met. Based on that argument, a Fulton County Superior Court judge halted the execution less than 24 hours before it was to take place, and the Georgia Supreme Court ruled in December 2022 that the agreement was a binding contract. People on death row who are not covered by the agreement have since become eligible for execution. One of them, Willie James Pye, was put to death in March 2024.

Elon Musk Calls Trump Megabill a ‘Disgusting Abomination'
Elon Musk Calls Trump Megabill a ‘Disgusting Abomination'

Wall Street Journal

time36 minutes ago

  • Wall Street Journal

Elon Musk Calls Trump Megabill a ‘Disgusting Abomination'

WASHINGTON—Former White House cost-cutting czar Elon Musk called President Trump's 'big, beautiful' tax and spending package a 'disgusting abomination,' stepping up his criticism just as the Senate is trying to quickly pass the measure and get it signed into law by July 4. 'Shame on those who voted for it: you know you did wrong. You know it,' said Musk, in comments on his X social-media platform. Musk, who left the administration last week, called the package a 'massive, outrageous, pork-filled Congressional spending bill.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store