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Asian American Civil Rights Groups Condemn U.S. Decision to Collect Private Social Media Data from Chinese Visitors

ByGeorge Bao

Feb 25, 2017

LOS ANGELES – Asian Americans Advancing Justice (AAAJ), an affiliation of five civil rights organizations, Friday condemned the Trump Administration’s move to collect private social media information from Chinese visitors entering the United States on tourist and business visas.

On Tuesday, February 21, the United States Customs and Border Protection (CBP) set forward a proposal to collect private social media information from Chinese visitors entering the U.S.

AAAJ states in a statement: “Asian Americans Advancing Justice condemns CBP’s proposal and believes it is yet another attempt by the new Trump administration to unfairly scrutinize visitors to the U.S. based on their race and national origin.”  

“Targeting Chinese travelers in such a sweeping manner would not increase our security, and would be an ineffective use of CBP resources,” the statement says.

“The proposal also lacks any standards or guidelines for evaluating social media posts, and provides no protections to ensure travelers are not unjustly detained or denied entry based on a misunderstanding of the content of posts.  This would lead to a chilling of online freedom of expression,” stresses the statement.

While this social media collection has been proposed in the name of national security and is touted as “optional,” “we have seen in the past that such practices have been used to coerce travelers into giving private information and have led to discrimination at airports and other points of entry to the U.S.  This type of interrogation and abuse is an already-too-common reality for Muslim Americans at the border,” the statement says.

CBP’s adoption of such a policy singling out visitors from China will only “fan the flames of anti-China and anti-Asian sentiment in the U.S., which is already on the rise due to President Trump’s rhetoric throughout his campaign and since taking office,” the statement says.  

The bottom line is that racial profiling has never been and will never be an effective national security tool, according to the statement.

 

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