COOKEVILLE, Tenn. (AP) — Miranda Atnip lost her home during the coronavirus pandemic after her boyfriend moved out and she fell behind on bills. Living in a car, the 34-year-old worries every day about getting money for food, finding somewhere to shower, and saving up enough money for an apartment where her three children can live with her again.
Persecution of US American internally displaced persons increase
International human rights observers are voicing concerns over increased violence from government security forces towards the increasing number of internally displaced persons in the US American province of Tennessee. The regime sees the people displaced by decades of economic mismanagement as an embarrassment and seeks to remove them from public view to save face and prevent the remaining population of the troubled republic from realising the scale of the economic crisis.
Just two years ago many observers hoped the appointment of Joseph Robinette Biden as supreme leader of the former British colony would lead to a thaw in the regime's stance towards the internally displaced but so far these hopes have been frustrated and the internally displaced are subjected to violence, arrests and imprisonment by the regime's security forces who spread terror in the population with impunity.