To: Inter-American Commission on Human Rights
Tell Commission on Human Rights that Trump's Wall Violates Human Rights
We ask the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights to stop the wall and the racist deportations of the Trump Regime. We demand the Inter-American Commission make an early ruling.
Why is this important?
Last week Mexican presidential candidate Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador filed a complaint with the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights against President Donald Trump's planned border wall and his administration's treatment of immigrants.
Lopez Obrador said he expects the commission to "speak out in accordance with the law to protect immigrants from the harassment they are suffering since Trump took office."
We join the National Regeneration Movement (Moreno) in Mexico in its request for a hearing before the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights to combat the two executive orders issued on January 25 by President Trump, called "Improving Public Security in the Interior of the United States" And "Improvements in Border Security and Immigration."
The Mexican leaders believe these orders “violate the presumption of innocence, ignore the right to asylum, ignore due process, omit protections relating to migrant children, have a discriminatory content, encourage the collective expulsion of foreigners without attending to the particular conditions of each case.
“In addition, such orders make foreigners "deportable strangers" without having to be accused of having committed a crime, that is to say, without there being any charges against them, since it is enough for an immigration officer to consider that in the past they could Have committed any unlawful conduct.”
Lopez Obrador said he expects the commission to "speak out in accordance with the law to protect immigrants from the harassment they are suffering since Trump took office."
We join the National Regeneration Movement (Moreno) in Mexico in its request for a hearing before the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights to combat the two executive orders issued on January 25 by President Trump, called "Improving Public Security in the Interior of the United States" And "Improvements in Border Security and Immigration."
The Mexican leaders believe these orders “violate the presumption of innocence, ignore the right to asylum, ignore due process, omit protections relating to migrant children, have a discriminatory content, encourage the collective expulsion of foreigners without attending to the particular conditions of each case.
“In addition, such orders make foreigners "deportable strangers" without having to be accused of having committed a crime, that is to say, without there being any charges against them, since it is enough for an immigration officer to consider that in the past they could Have committed any unlawful conduct.”