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Wash Post reports that US national parks are being asked to remove signs about climate change and mistreatment of Native Americans.

The Washington Post reported on Tuesday that U.S. officials ordered this month national parks to remove hundreds of signs and displays about the mistreatment by settlers of Native Americans, as well as climate change. This is part of Donald Trump's effort to change public spaces and museums, which rights activists say could reverse decades of social progress. Last week, the National Park Service removed an exhibition on slavery from Philadelphia's?historical site, in accordance with Trump’s claims of "anti-American ideologies" at historical and cultural institutions.

The Post reported citing documents that Trump administration officials had ordered that this month signs in at least 17 more parks, including the Grand Canyon and Glacier Parks, Big Bend, Zion, and Big Bend, be removed or modified.

The Post reported that the'removal orders' included a display about the forced'removal of Native Americans at the Grand Canyon, while officials from the Trump administration flagged a climate change brochure and sign at Glacier National Park.

The U.S. The Interior Department, which oversees National Park Service in a press release, stated that they were implementing Trump's Executive Order on "Restoring Truth to American History".

All federal agencies must review the interpretive material to ensure accuracy, truthfulness, and alignment with national values. The National Park Service has completed the review and is now taking the appropriate actions in accordance with this Order.

In?September, the department announced that all interpretive signs in national parks were being reviewed. The department announced in?September that all interpretive signage in national parks was being reviewed.

Civil rights groups claim that the Trump administration is reversing social progress and denying recognition of important phases in?American history.

Last year, the Republican president alarmed civil right advocates with an executive order in which he said that he was fighting "a false revisionism of history". He complained about the "excessive focus" on slavery. (Reporting and editing by Daphne Psaledakis)

(source: Reuters)