United Nations expert slams United States on poverty, quitting global rights body

New York-based law professor Philip Alston said Friday that high U.S. income inequality "can only be made worse" by the Trump administration's policy of cutting taxes and restricting welfare.
US Ambassador Nikki Haley. (File |AP)
US Ambassador Nikki Haley. (File |AP)

BERLIN: A human rights expert is criticizing the U.S. for failing to tackle poverty, days after Washington quit the United Nations body that appointed him.

New York-based law professor Philip Alston said Friday that high U.S. income inequality "can only be made worse" by the Trump administration's policy of cutting taxes and restricting welfare.

A day before Alston presented his report to the Human Rights Council, U.S. ambassador to the U.N. Nikki Haley branded it "misleading and politically motivated" in a letter to Senator Bernie Sanders.

Announcing the U.S. pullout from the Geneva-based body Tuesday, Haley described the council as a "cesspool of bias."

No U.S. diplomats were present to respond Friday when Alston told the council of witnessing "raw sewage" pouring into poor residents' gardens in Alabama.
 

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