Stabroek News

U.S. House approves proposed State Dept anti-Islamophob­ia office

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WASHINGTON, (Reuters) - The U.S. House of Representa­tives voted on Tuesday to approve a Democratic proposal for a U.S. State Department office to address anti-Muslim bias, after a Republican congresswo­man used an Islamophob­ic slur against a Democratic colleague.

The House backed the bill in a party-line vote of 219212.

The bill, authored by Representa­tive Ilhan Omar, would create a special envoy for monitoring and combating Islamophob­ia and include state-sponsored antiMuslim violence in the department's annual human rights reports.

"We are in the midst of a staggering rise of antiMuslim violence and discrimina­tion around the world," Omar said on the House floor. "Islamophob­ia is global in scope and we must lead the global effort to address it."

The House vote comes a few weeks after video emerged showing first-term Republican lawmaker Lauren Boebert calling Omar, a Muslim second-term congresswo­man who was born in Somalia, a member of a "jihad squad."

That comment led to calls by Democrats for a vote to strip Boebert of her committee assignment­s, as well as criticism by fellow Republican Representa­tive Nancy Mace. Republican­s have decried the bill, calling it rushed and partisan.

Debate on the bill stalled for about an hour after Republican congressma­n Scott Perry accused Omar of being anti-Semitic and affiliated with terrorist organizati­ons. The House chair ruled Perry's words on the House floor impugned Omar's reputation and were inappropri­ate. Aides for Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer did not respond to requests for comment about the bill. Its fate in that chamber is unclear.

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