USAID chief details Trump war on persecution, ‘unleashing’ religious orgs to serve communities

USAID chief details Trump war on persecution, ‘unleashing’ religious orgs to serve communities by Calvin Freiburger for Life Site News

Former Rep. Mark Green (R-WI), President Trump’s administrator for the United States Agency for International Development (USAID), took the stage at the annual Values Voter Summit in the nation’s capital Friday morning to discuss the state of religious liberty around the world, and the Trump administration’s response.

After calling faith a “source of strength and inspiration” that is “woven into the fabric of American history,” the recognition of which is an “expression of American compassion,” Green lamented how “in today’s world, too many people in too many places are attacked and persecuted merely for exercising this human right.”

He went on to detail ISIS waging genocide against Christians and other religious minorities in northern Iraq, Communist China’s use of reeducation camps to “strip [Uyghur Muslims] of their individuality, identity, and faith,” the resurgence of the “old scouge of anti-Semitism” across Europe, Nicaraguan dictator Daniel Ortega ordering assaults against churches willing to speak out against the regime’s human-rights violations.

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“We cannot be indifferent, we must not be indifferent, and I am here to reaffirm that the Trump administration will never be indifferent when it comes to the persecution of faith communities,” Green declared. “All over the world, USAID is supporting programs to address religious hate speech and interfaith conflict, to promote the strengthening and enforcement of laws that protect religious freedom and increase the capacity of civil society to advocate for it.”

He said the agency has provided $400 million for religious-persecution relief efforts, working with dozens of local partners, faith-based organizations, and international groups to provide humanitarian relief in places like northern Iraq. He also announced a new grant of $5 million to several universities including Purdue and Notre Dame to “assess the agricultural damage done by ISIS that is impacting traditional cultural practices of persecuted communities.”

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