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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 relating to the'mistreatment of Native Americans in the past by settlers', as well as the - climate change and - environmental protection. 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 exhibit about slavery from a Philadelphia historical site, in accordance with Trump's claims, which were rejected by civil right groups.

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

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

The National Park Service didn't?respond immediately to a comment request.

The U.S. Interior Department, the department that oversees National Park Service, announced in September, "all interpretive signs in national parks were under review." The interpretive signage in national parks and other places provides written and visual information on their history and culture.

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

Last year, the Republican president sparked alarm among civil rights advocates with an executive order in which he declared that he was fighting "a false revisionism of history". He complained of what he deemed as an excessive focus on the "how bad slavery was." (Reporting and editing by Daphne Psaledakis)

(source: Reuters)