The Trump administration’s contempt for women’s and reproductive rights was on full display on Friday as the State Department released its annual report on global human rights, which critics said excluded numerous violations of reproductive freedoms and access to contraception.
“Reproductive rights are human rights, and omitting the issue signals the Trump Administration’s latest retreat from global leadership on human rights,” said Joanne Lin, Amnesty International’s national director of advocacy and government relations, in a statement. “Human rights defenders should view the reports with a critical eye, and fight against any effort to obscure or diminish violations of human rights wherever they may occur.”
In addition to treating women’s rights violations as though they don’t exist, the report recharacterized Israel’s occupation of the West Bank and Gaza, dropping the term “occupied territories,” and shifted attention away from societal discrimination faced by LGBTQ communities around the world, mentioning only incidents in which governments failed to protect these groups.
Human Rights Watch catalogued a number of significant omissions on its Twitter account in an effort to “[fill] in some of the most critical gaps,” saying the report “guts the analysis of sexual and reproductive rights, reflecting the Trump administration’s hostility toward these issues.”
The group’s reporting on social media included accounts of rampant domestic violence in Brazil, a total ban on emergency contraception in Poland, and the deaths of women in Nepal from the practice of “chhaupadi”—the expulsion of women and girls from their homes during menstruation.