The US encourages foreign governments and allies to engage more with citizens who are concerned about mass migration.
The U.S. State Department directed its embassies around the world Friday to report any human rights implications and public safety impacts of mass migration, calling the movement a “human rights concern.”
“Mass migration poses an existential threat to Western civilization and undermines the stability of key American allies,” the State Department posted on X. “Western nations have endured crime waves, terror attacks, sexual assaults, and the displacement of communities.”
U.S. officials are also urging governments to take bold action to defend its citizens against the threats mass migration poses.
The United States will also report foreign policies that punish citizens who object to any continued influx of foreign refugees and immigrants, and others who document crimes and human rights abuses committed by people who have migrated into their countries.
“These issues have plagued citizens of Western nations for years,” the State Department said.
Similar issues are prevalent in the UK as well, where reports have increased in the last few years of sexual attacks perpetrated against thousands of girls, specifically Rotherham, Oxford, and Newcastle, by grooming gangs made up of migrant men, according to the State Department.
London has also become increasingly dangerous, with crime increasing over the past decade, according to Statista.
Bridgerton actress Genevieve Chenneour, shared a video on social media Thursday claiming to have suffered a random attack again in London. She is the latest celebrity to report being a victim of crime in the city.
The 27-year-old actress broken down in tears as she shared what happened. She said she was walking down the street near Oxford Circus headed to an audition when a “full-grown man” looked at her and hit her. The attack caused her to hit a wall.
“I’m trying to gather myself, but I’m so shaken,” Chenneour said. “It’s so nerve-wracking for me being out in Central London now.”
Chenneour asked why there weren’t more police officers on the street and available for her to walk up to them and report the incident. The attack wasn’t big enough to report to authorities and expect a response, she said.







