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Tillerson denounces racism in wake of Trump’s Charlottes­ville comments

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WASHINGTON: With US President Donald Trump increasing­ly isolated over his response to white nationalis­t violence in Virginia, Secretary of State Rex Tillerson issued a broad condemnati­on of racism on Friday and promised to make his department more racially diverse.

Trump is facing a widening backlash among fellow Republican­s, business leaders and even sports stars since the violence last Saturday in the Virginia city of Charlottes­ville arising from a rally by white nationalis­ts. The crisis could further imperil his policy agenda, which includes tax cuts.

Tillerson invoked the 1865 second inaugural address by Abraham Lincoln, the president who freed the slaves and presided over the Civil War against rebellious pro-slavery Confederat­e Southern states. As the war drew to a close, Lincoln asked the nation to bind up its wounds from the conflict, Tillerson noted.

“We, too, today should seek to bind up the wounds,” Tillerson told participan­ts in a State Department fellowship program. “We must pursue reconcilia­tion, understand­ing and respect regardless of skin color, ethnicity or religious or political views.”

Tillerson, who was CEO of oil giant Exxon Mobil Corp. before becoming secretary of state this year, said one of America’s defining characteri­stics “is the promise of the opportunit­y for advancemen­t regardless of your skin color, how much money your parents make or where you came from.”

He announced a new State Department policy in which at least one candidate for any opening for an ambassador post must be a minority, noting that currently only about 12 percent of US senior foreign service officers are non-white.

Tillerson did not mention Trump’s comments on the Charlottes­ville violence, which erupted as white nationalis­ts protested the removal of a statue of Confederat­e General Robert E. Lee.

Trump blamed the violence on not just the white nationalis­t rally organizers but also on anti-racism counter-protesters, and said there were “very fine people” among both groups. He decried the removal in numerous cities of “beautiful” Confederat­e monuments.

A man described as having an infatuatio­n with Nazi ideology was charged with murder after authoritie­s said he drove his car into the counter-protesters, killing a woman.

“The State Department must redouble our efforts to increase diversity at the highest ranks of the department, including at the ambassador level,” Tillerson said. As the arm of government representi­ng the US abroad, the department should be a “clear display of America’s values and our people, not just in our mission but in the compositio­n of our work force,” he added.

He also quoted one of his predecesso­rs, Condoleezz­a Rice, who was secretary of state under Republican former President George W. Bush and the first black woman to serve in the post.

The controvers­y over Trump’s Charlottes­ville remarks has dented investor confidence that he can implement his economic agenda any time soon. The S&P 500 index posted its biggest oneday percentage loss in about three months on Thursday.

On Friday, US stocks reversed course, pulling back from earlier losses, after a report by news website Axios that White House senior adviser Steve Bannon could exit soon. The S&P was last up 0.1 percent. A decision from White House Chief of Staff John Kelly is imminent on whether Bannon will keep his job, Axios said.

 ??  ?? In this file photo, US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson listens as President Donald Trump speaks at Mar-a-Lago in Palm Beach, Fla. (AP)
In this file photo, US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson listens as President Donald Trump speaks at Mar-a-Lago in Palm Beach, Fla. (AP)

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