Martin Luther King Jr Children Condems Trump Over Shithole Comments
'These are evil days': Martin Luther King Jr's children condemn Trump over 's***hole comments'
The President has faced severe international condemnation for his alleged remarks
Alexandra Wilts Washington DC Tuesday 16 January 2018Martin Luther King III speaks in front of the Martin Luther King Jr Memorial on Martin Luther King Day January 15, 2018 in Washington DC (Photo by Win McNamee/Getty Images)
Martin Luther King Jr’s eldest son has said we are living in “evil days” as he blasted Donald Trump’s reported description of Haiti, El Salvador and certain African nations as “s***hole countries”.
In the days leading up to the US holiday celebrating Dr King on Monday, Mr Trump has faced severe international condemnation for his alleged comments and has been forced to battle fresh accusations he is racist.
“These are evil days when the President of the United States doesn’t seem to understand that Africa is a continent, not a state and he refers to countries such as Nigeria and Haiti and El Salvador as, y’all know that word. I don’t talk like that. Y’all know what he said”, Dr King’s son, Martin Luther King III, said at a breakfast honouring his late father.
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Mr Trump stands accused of using “s***hole” to describe various nations during an immigration meeting with a bipartisan group of six senators. The President, in the meeting, also questioned the need to admit more Haitians to the US, according to a number of accounts of the meeting.
“Why are we having all these people from s***hole countries come here?” he said, according to the Washington Post, as part of the discussions over a bipartisan immigration deal.
He added that the US should admit more people from places like Norway.
Martin Luther King III was quick to admonish this claim on Monday: "When a president insists that our nation needs more citizens from white states like Norway, I don't even think we need to spend any time even talking about what it says and what it is."
Dr King’s daughter, Bernice King, also criticised Mr Trump. “We cannot allow the nations of the world to embrace the words that come from our president as a reflection of the true spirit of America,” she said while speaking at a service in Atlanta.
“We are one people, one nation, one blood, one destiny. All of civilization and humanity originated from the soils of Africa,“ Ms King added. “Our collective voice in this hour must always be louder than the one who sometimes does not reflect the legacy of my father.”
Having repeatedly denied the remarks attributed to him, Mr Trump’s weekly address honoured Dr King, who is perhaps best known for his 1963 “I Have a Dream” speech calling for civil and economic rights.
Late Monday morning, about two hours after he arrived at his golf club in Florida, Mr Trump retweeted the White House post containing his address about Dr King.
“Dr King’s dream is our dream,” Mr Trump said in the message. “It is the American Dream. It’s the promise stitched into the fabric of our nation, etched into the hearts of our people and written into the soul of humankind. ”
The day before, Mr Trump told journalists he was “not a racist” and asserted that he was “the least racist person” they have ever interviewed.
The President has also used Twitter to dispute reports he used the word “s***hole”, but Democratic Senator Dick Durbin, who attended the White House meeting, asserts that Mr Trump “repeatedly” said “these hate-filled things”.
On Monday, Mr Durbin doubled down on his statements, telling reporters that he stands by every word he said. Soon after, Mr Trump tweeted that “Dicky Durbin” had “totally misrepresented” what was said at the White House meeting.
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