Nikki Haley blasts Blinken's invite to UN experts on racism, minority issues: 'This is insane'

Nikki Haley on Cuban protestors calling for end of communism: ‘These people are desperate for freedom’

Former U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley discusses critical race theory, President Biden’s handling of Afghanistan, and Cuban protestors on ‘America Reports.’

EXCLUSIVE: Former U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley on Wednesday tore into the Biden administration for extending an invitation to the United Nations’ envoys on racism and minority issues to make an official visit to the U.S., describing the move as “insane.”

“China has one million Uyghurs in concentration camps, Cuba is beating protesters, and Venezuela is torturing political prisoners,” Haley said in a statement to Fox News.

“Yet Biden’s Secretary of State is inviting the U.N. to investigate human rights in the United States — the freest, fairest country in the world. This is INSANE,” she added.

Secretary of State Antony Blinken on Tuesday said he was inviting the independent experts to make official visits to the U.S. and would extend further invitations to other envoys, who are appointed by the U.N. Human Rights Council.

“As the President has repeatedly made clear, great nations such as ours do not hide from our shortcomings; they acknowledge them openly and strive to improve with transparency,” Blinken said in a statement. “In so doing, we not only work to set the standard for national responses to these challenges, we also strengthen our democracy, and give new hope and motivation to human rights defenders across the globe.”

Blinken said the U.S. will issue a “formal, standing invitation to all U.N. experts who report and advise on thematic human rights issues” and has already reached out to the U.N. special rapporteur on contemporary forms of racism and the U.N. Special Rapporteur on minority issues to invite them to make an official visit.

Rapporteurs are independent experts appointed by the Human Rights Council who will typically gather information on their respective issues and then issue a public report. 

The Trump administration pulled out of the Human Rights Council in 2018 due to its anti-Israel bias and the makeup of its membership, which included countries with abysmal human rights records. 

Haley has previously called the body the “cesspool of political bias that makes a mockery of human rights.” The Biden administration has sought to rejoin it.

The current special rapporteur on contemporary forms of racism is a law professor at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) School of Law. The office’s most recent report sought to highlight “how digital technologies are being deployed to advance the xenophobic and racially discriminatory ideologies that have become so prevalent, in part due to widespread perceptions of refugees and migrants as per se threats to national security.”

Blinken also used the statement to welcome the controversial U.N. Human Rights Council’s adoption of a resolution on racism against Africans and people of African descent in the context of law enforcement.

Blinken’s comments Tuesday suggested that he expected the U.N. officials to be critical of the U.S. for its record on racism.

“Responsible nations must not shrink from scrutiny of their human rights record; rather, they should acknowledge it with the intent to improve,” he said in the statement.

Haley was not the only Republican to criticize the move. Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., also pointed to Cuba as a stark contrast to the freedoms in the U.S.

“@SecBlinken instead of asking the @UN to come here & tell us how ‘racist’ America is, why don’t you ask them to go to #Cuba where an evil socialist regime storms into peoples homes, beats the crap out of them & then drags them away?” he asked on Twitter.

Fox News’ Ben Evansky contributed to this report.

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