US apologises for 1882 law targeting Chinese migrants
June 19th, 2012 - 4:05 pm ICT by IANSBeijing, June 19 (IANS) The US House of Representatives has passed a resolution apologising for a discriminating law passed in 1882 that targeted Chinese migrants.
In a voice vote, the House passed the resolution Monday that formally expressed regret for the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882 that discriminated against people of Chinese origin in the US, China Daily reported Tuesday.
It was approved in the Senate in October last year. The act was the first and the only federal law in US history that excluded a single group of people from immigration on no basis other than their race.
It explicitly banned Chinese workers from migrating and existing residents from naturalisation and voting.
It was later expanded several times to apply to all people of Chinese descent, each time imposing increasingly severe restrictions on immigration and naturalisation.
“Today (Monday), the House made history when both chambers of Congress officially and formally acknowledged the ugly and un-American nature of laws that targeted Chinese immigrants,” said Congresswoman Judy Chu, the only member of Chinese descent, and who introduced the bill.
The resolution was applauded by Congress leaders.
House Democratic Leader Nancy Pelosi said it “reiterates our commitment to equal rights for all Americans, regardless of race, now and in the future”.
Mike Honda, chair emeritus of Congressional Asian Pacific American Caucus, said the resolution was an “opportunity to learn from our mistakes”.
More than 100,000 Chinese lived in the US around the turn of the 19th century. They were recruited “to work as cheap labour to do the most dangerous work laying the tracks” on the transcontinental railroad, Honda said.
They “strengthened our nation’s infrastructure, only to be persecuted when their labour was seen as competition and the dirtiest work was done”, he said.
Haipei Shue, president of the National Council of Chinese Americans, said it was “a great day for Chinese Americans”.
–Indo-Asian news Service
pm/tb
- First US woman vice presidential candidate dead (Lead) - Mar 27, 2011
- Indian-American student triggers Harvard probe - Feb 03, 2012
- Asian American bodies denounce hearings targeting Muslims - Mar 11, 2011
- Thousands assemble for May Day rally in Los Angeles - May 02, 2010
- Six dead, U.S. Congresswoman Giffords among at least 12 injured in Az. shooting - Jan 09, 2011
- South Asians fear racial profiling over US court ruling - Jun 26, 2012
- US House resolution for tracking hate crimes against Sikhs - Aug 15, 2012
- More South Asians making Washington DC their home - Jul 22, 2009
- Six Indian-Americans win fellowships - Apr 28, 2012
- Chinese daily criticises US for gurdwara shooting - Aug 07, 2012
- Arizona Immigration Law 'an open invitation for racial profiling': U.S. professor - May 01, 2010
- Russia leads world in illegal migration - Jun 29, 2012
- US House panel holds attorney general in contempt - Jun 21, 2012
- South Asians seek rejection of tough US immigration law - Apr 26, 2012
- Calderon says new Arizona immigration law causing discrimination - May 19, 2010
Tags: american caucus, asian pacific american, chair emeritus, cheap labour, chinese descent, chinese exclusion act, chinese exclusion act of 1882, chinese immigrants, chinese migrants, chinese origin, chinese workers, congress leaders, democratic leader nancy pelosi, exclusion act of 1882, house democratic leader, house democratic leader nancy pelosi, immigration and naturalisation, mike honda, nancy pelosi, voice vote