Martes, 21 de enero, 2025
PEOPLE SEEKING SAFETY AT RISK IN THE USA
US President Donald Trump has vowed to implement a mass deportation campaign targeting millions of immigrants and people seeking safety. His plans will rely on mass arrests, mass detention, and mass removals of both longstanding community members and recently arrived people. It will deprive people of the opportunity to ask for safety, throw people into arbitrary detention, return people to harm, separate families, tear apart communities, subject people to racial profiling, spread fear, and undermine human security, prosperity, and dignity. We urge President Trump to respect the human rights of immigrants and people seeking safety and abandon his mass deportation campaign.
TAKE ACTION: WRITE AN APPEAL IN YOUR OWN WORDS OR USE THIS MODEL LETTER
President Donald Trump
The White House
1600 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW
Washington, DC 20500, USA
webform*: https://www.whitehouse.gov/contact/
Dear President Trump:
I urge you to uphold the human rights of immigrants and people seeking safety in the United States and abandon all plans for mass deportations.
The U.S. government has an obligation under international law to ensure that its laws, policies, and practices do not place immigrants and people seeking safety at an increased risk of human rights abuses. While the U.S., like all countries, has the power to regulate the entry and stay of non-nationals in its territory, it can only do so within the limits of its human rights obligations.
A mass deportation campaign will violate multiple rights, including protection against return to a country where people are at real risk of torture and other serious human rights harms (refoulement); the right to seek asylum; freedom from arbitrary detention; due process; family unity and children’s rights; and non-discrimination. It will also tear apart communities, families, and the economy.
I call on you to:
• halt all plans for a mass deportation campaign, including plans for a national emergency, raids,
mass detention, and deportations without due process
• ensure people who would be at risk of serious human rights violations upon return are not deported
• uphold the human right to seek asylum
• ensure that no one is arbitrarily detained and that deportation procedures uphold the human rights
and human dignity of all
• respect the right to family unity and the rights of children
• ensure that all laws, policies, and practices of the U.S. government on asylum and migration fully
respect the right to non-discrimination
I implore you to abandon the demonization of immigrants and people seeking safety and reverse course
on your plans for mass deportations.
Yours sincerely,
United States President Donald Trump’s first term was marked by bigotry, xenophobia, white supremacist rhetoric, and extensive and serious human rights violations. His administration was responsible for untold damage to human rights in the U.S. and abroad, further damaging the very institutions that are supposed to be responsible for ensuring that all people can live freely in safety and dignity. The Biden administration then continued and expanded Trump’s cruel immigration policies, leaving people on the move inside the U.S. and at the U.S.’s border in increasingly precarious situations and at high risk. This second Trump term must change course, and Amnesty International will continue to fight for everyone’s human rights to be respected.
President Trump has promised in his second term to implement a mass deportation campaign reaching millions of immigrants and people seeking safety in the United States. Such a campaign would include a national emergency, raids and racial profiling, mass arbitrary detention, and deportations without due process and in disregard of risks upon return.
This reckless disregard for people’s dignity, well-being, and human rights will jeopardize millions of people who sought refuge and shared opportunity in the U.S. and devastate towns and cities across the country where they built new lives, raised families, and contributed to the shared prosperity of their communities. As of 2024, there are approximately 13 million undocumented immigrants in the United States, and millions more living under temporary statuses that Trump has promised to terminate.
The U.S. government has an obligation under international law to ensure that its laws, policies, and practices do not place migrants and people seeking safety at an increased risk of human rights abuses. While the U.S., like all countries, has the power to regulate the entry and stay of non-nationals in its territory, it can only do so within the limits of its human rights obligations.
The U.S. is trading fear and cruelty for human rights, pushing the country even further away from the decades’-old international obligations to uphold the human right to seek asylum and not send people back to the very harms that they fled. All people have the human right not to be returned to a country where they would be at real risk of torture or other serious human rights harms. To protect against that, people have the right under international law to seek and enjoy asylum – regardless of their manner of entry. Detention and deportation procedures must be in accordance with due process of law and include guarantees that human rights will be respected and protected. All people have the human rights to be free from discriminatory practices and to family unity.
Human rights are universal principles that transcend politics and offer a roadmap to a better future. The incoming administration of President Donald Trump must ensure that the U.S. government meets its human rights obligations, uses its influence to advance human rights globally, and engages other governments to do the same. It must denounce anguage around immigration and asylum grounded in racism and white nationalism.
PREFERRED LANGUAGE TO ADDRESS TARGET: English
You can also write in your own language.
PLEASE TAKE ACTION AS SOON AS POSSIBLE UNTIL: 3 March 2025
Please check with the Amnesty office in your country if you wish to send appeals after the deadline.
NAME AND PRONOUN: immigrants and people seeking safety [they/them]
LINK TO PREVIOUS UA: N/A