WASHINGTON: Former US President Barack Obama on Saturday (Feb 14) condemned the operations of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officers in Minnesota, evaluating their behaviour to conduct seen “in dictatorships”.
Hundreds of federal brokers together with ICE brokers carried out weeks of sweeping raids and arrests in what the Trump administration claims had been focused missions towards criminals, till the operation was ended this week.
Obama had criticised the actions of ICE brokers as illegal final month, however went additional in an interview with left-wing political commentator Brian Tyler Cohen launched Saturday.
“The rogue behaviour of brokers of the federal authorities is deeply regarding and harmful,” he stated.
He referred to as the behaviour of federal officers, which included two fatal shootings that sparked mounting stress on President Donald Trump’s mass crackdown, as the kind that “up to now we have seen in authoritarian nations and we have seen in dictatorships”.
However Obama, the one Black president in American historical past, stated he had discovered hope in communities pushing again towards the operations.
“Not simply randomly, however in a scientific, organised manner, residents saying, ‘this isn’t the America we imagine in’, and we will combat again, and we will push again with the reality and with cameras and with peaceable protests,” he stated.
“That type of heroic, sustained behaviour in subzero climate by strange folks is what ought to give us hope.
“So long as we have now of us doing that, I really feel like we will get by way of this.”
Trump’s pointman Tom Homan on Thursday introduced the top of the aggressive immigration operation in Minnesota that triggered massive protests and nationwide outrage.
Within the wide-ranging podcast interview, Obama additionally criticised a lack of shame and decorum within the nation’s political discourse, responding for the primary time to a publish on President Donald Trump’s social media that depicted him and first woman Michelle as monkeys.
