Some nationalities escape Biden’s sweeping asylum ban because deportation flights are scarce

Some nationalities escape Biden’s sweeping asylum ban because deportation flights are scarce
The Homeland Security Department said in a detailed document outlining the ban that ‘demographics and nationalities encountered at the border significantly impact’ its ability to deport people. (AP)
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Updated 09 June 2024
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Some nationalities escape Biden’s sweeping asylum ban because deportation flights are scarce

Some nationalities escape Biden’s sweeping asylum ban because deportation flights are scarce
  • Joe Biden suspended asylum processing at the US border with Mexico this week.
  • The policy, which took effect Wednesday, has an exception for ‘operational considerations’

SAN DIEGO: The Border Patrol arrested Gerardo Henao 14 hours after President Joe Biden suspended asylum processing at the US border with Mexico this week. But instead of being summarily deported, he was dropped off by agents the next day at a San Diego bus stop, where he caught a train to the airport for a flight to Newark, New Jersey.
Henao, who said he left his jewelry business in Medellin, Colombia, because of constant extortion attempts, had one thing working in his favor: a scarcity of deportation flights to that country. Lack of resources, diplomatic limitations and logistical hurdles make it difficult for the Biden administration to impose its sweeping measure on a large scale.
The policy, which took effect Wednesday, has an exception for “operational considerations,” official language acknowledging the government lacks the money and authority to deport everyone subject to the measure, especially people from countries in South America, Asia, Africa and Europe who didn’t start showing up at the border until recently.
The Homeland Security Department said in a detailed document outlining the ban that “demographics and nationalities encountered at the border significantly impact” its ability to deport people.
Thousands of migrants have been deported under the ban so far, according to two senior Homeland Security Department officials who briefed reporters Friday on condition that they not be named. There were 17 deportation flights, including one to Uzbekistan. Those deported include people from Colombia, Ecuador, El Salvador, Guatemala, Peru and Mexico.
Henao, 59, said a Border Patrol agent told him about the ban after he was picked up Wednesday on a dirt road near a high-voltage power line in the boulder-strewn mountains east of San Diego. The agent processed release papers ordering him to appear in immigration court Oct. 23 in New Jersey. He casually asked Henao why he fled Colombia but didn’t pursue that line of questioning.
“It was nothing,” Henao said at a San Diego transit center, where the Border Patrol dropped off four busloads of migrants in a four-hour span Thursday afternoon. “They took my photo, my fingerprints and that was it.”
Many migrants released that day were from China, India, Colombia and Ecuador. One group included men from Mauritania, Sudan and Ethiopia.
“Hello, if you are arriving right now, you have been released from immigration custody and you can go to the airport,” a volunteer with a bullhorn told the migrants, directing them to a light-rail platform across the parking lot. “You can go for free if you don’t have money for a taxi or an Uber.”
Under the measure, asylum is suspended when arrests for illegal crossings reach 2,500 a day. It ends when they average below 1,500 for a week straight.
Border officials were told to give the highest priority to detaining migrants who can be easily deported, followed by “hard to remove” nationalities requiring at least five days to issue travel documents and then “very hard to remove” nationalities whose governments don’t accept US flights.
The instructions are laid out in a memo to agents that was reported by the New York Post. The Associated Press confirmed its contents with a US official who spoke on condition of anonymity because it has not been publicly released.
Homeland Security has been clear about the hurdles, said Theresa Cardinal Brown, senior adviser for immigration and border policy at the Bipartisan Policy Center, a Washington think tank.
“There’s a limitation to the resources that the government has for detention and removal of people, and in particular to countries that we have a hard time removing people to because the (other) government is not cooperative,” Brown said. “We can’t detain them indefinitely.”
US Immigration and Customs and Enforcement did 679 deportation flights from January through May, nearly 60 percent of them to Guatemala and Honduras, according to Witness at the Border, an advocacy group that analyzes flight data. There were 46 flights to Colombia, 42 to Ecuador and 12 to Peru, a relatively small amount considering that tens of thousands enter illegally from those countries every month.
There were only 10 deportation flights during that period to Africa, which has emerged as a major source of migration to the United States. There was just one to China, despite the arrests of nearly 13,000 Chinese migrants.
Mexico is the easiest country for removals because it’s only a matter of driving to the nearest border crossing, but Mexicans accounted for less than 3 of 10 border arrests in the government’s last fiscal year, down from 9 of 10 in 2010. Mexico also takes up to 30,000 people a month from Cuba, Haiti, Nicaragua and Venezuela, countries that have limited capacity or willingness to take people back.
Some countries refuse to accept flights to avoid getting overwhelmed themselves, Corey Price, then-director of ICE enforcement and removal operations, said in an interview last year.
“We don’t drive the bus on this,” said Price, who retired last month. “We don’t decide unilaterally, ‘OK, we’re sending your citizen back to you.’ No, that country still has to agree to take them back.”


Trump accused of groping a woman in 1993 while Jeffrey Epstein watched

Trump accused of groping a woman in 1993 while Jeffrey Epstein watched
Updated 7 sec ago
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Trump accused of groping a woman in 1993 while Jeffrey Epstein watched

Trump accused of groping a woman in 1993 while Jeffrey Epstein watched
Williams’ allegation is the latest in a lengthy list of accusations made against Trump, including by E. Jean Carroll
Karoline Leavitt, a Trump spokeswoman, called the allegations “unequivocally false” and argued they were politically motivated

WASHINGTON: Stacey Williams alleged this week that former President Donald Trump groped her at Trump Tower in early 1993 as disgraced hedge fund manager Jeffrey Epstein watched. The former model made the allegation during a video chat of sexual violence survivors supporting Vice President Kamala Harris ‘ campaign.
Williams’ allegation is the latest in a lengthy list of accusations made against Trump, including by E. Jean Carroll, who has been locked in a legal battle with the businessman-turned-president after a jury found him liable in 2023 for sexually assaulting the advice columnist in 1996 and later for defaming her. The allegations against Trump go back decades and include those described in the “Access Hollywood” tape, a 2005 video made public weeks before Election Day 2016 that showed the then-reality television star bragging about grabbing, forcibly kissing and sexually assaulting women.
Williams said on the video call that she met and began seeing Epstein in 1992. Epstein died by suicide in 2019 while awaiting trial in New York for a series of sex trafficking charges, sparking rampant conspiracy theories.
The former model said the two were walking down Fifth Avenue in “late winter, early spring” of 1993 when Epstein suggested they “stop by and see Trump.”
“So we went into Trump Tower and went up the elevator. And moments later, Trump was greeting us and he pulled me into him and started groping me,” Williams recalled. “He put his hands all over my breasts, my waist, my butt. And I froze. And I froze because I was so deeply confused about what was happening because the hands were moving all over me.”
Karoline Leavitt, a Trump spokeswoman, called the allegations “unequivocally false” and argued they were politically motivated.
Williams said Epstein and Trump “were, like, smiling at one another and continuing on in their conversation.” At the time of the alleged incident, Trump was in his mid-40s, while Williams was in her mid-20s.
When the two left, Williams said, there was “seething rage” by Epstein, who swiftly began “berating” her once they got to the sidewalk.
“He kept saying, ‘Why did you let him do that? Why did you let him put his hands all over you?’ And he made me feel so disgusting,” she recalled, adding later that she “felt so humiliated and so sick to my stomach and was so upset.”
As she “absorbed what happened,” however, Williams said she felt like there was some “sort of sick bet or game” between Trump and Epstein and that she was “rolled in there like a piece of meat for some kind of challenge or twisted game.”
Williams added that “not long after” that meeting in Trump Tower she received a postcard from Trump. Williams said her agent received the postcard, via courier, from Trump.
Williams’ team provided The Associated Press with images of the postcard. One side is a photo of Palm Beach and Mar-a-Lago, the former president’s resort in Florida, and the other side is writing allegedly from Trump. “Stacey, your home away from home. Love, Donald,” reads the postcard.
The organizer of the Survivors for Harris video call said this week’s meeting was not affiliated with the Harris campaign and was an outside gathering of sexual violence survivors and advocate organizations. The Harris campaign declined Friday to comment on the allegations. A member of Williams’ team said she has had no contact with the Harris campaign.
In an interview with CNN after the video call, Williams called the encounter with Trump “one of the strangest moments of my life.”
“I think I probably was trying to smile and go through the motions of being engaged the way you would in a social situation. But it was an out-of-body experience,” she said. “So, I don’t know if I spoke, I don’t know if I answered questions, I don’t know.”
Although Trump has sought to distance himself from Epstein in recent years, he told New York Magazine in 2002 that he had known “Jeff” for 15 years.
“Terrific guy,” Trump told the magazine. “He’s a lot of fun to be with. It is even said that he likes beautiful women as much as I do, and many of them are on the younger side. No doubt about it — Jeffrey enjoys his social life.”
Trump has faced allegations of sexual misconduct and assault for years, all of which he has denied. Many of these allegations followed the publishing of the “Access Hollywood” tape in 2016. While the moment was perilous for Trump’s campaign, he went on to win the 2016 election and the allegations against him have not slowed his political rise.
Williams told CNN that she chose not to come forward earlier due to family considerations.
“You want to be really, really ready, and I wasn’t,” Williams told the network. “I think there’s an evolution to contending with your abuse, or these types of incidents, and it doesn’t happen overnight.”

EU chief cancels meeting with Serbian PM over Russia minister: ambassador

EU chief cancels meeting with Serbian PM over Russia minister: ambassador
Updated 23 min 16 sec ago
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EU chief cancels meeting with Serbian PM over Russia minister: ambassador

EU chief cancels meeting with Serbian PM over Russia minister: ambassador
  • Vucevic had met earlier with Maxim Reshetnikov, Russia’s Minister of Economic Development.
  • The statement said that Vucevic spoke with Reshetnikov and a Russian delegation

BELGRADE: EU chief Ursula von der Leyen canceled talks with Serbia’s Prime Minister Milos Vucevic on Friday because of his earlier meeting with a Russian minister, the EU’s ambassador said.
“We canceled the meeting... following the prime minister meeting with the minister of economy of the Russian federation,” the EU’s ambassador in Belgrade, Emanuele Giaufret, told AFP.
Vucevic had met earlier with Maxim Reshetnikov, Russia’s Minister of Economic Development.
Giaufret said that according to a statement published on the Serbian government’s website, which he said was later removed, there was an “indication of Serbia’s intention to strengthen economic relations in other areas with the Russian Federation.”
“In that light the president of the Commission felt that there were no reasons to hold the meeting with the prime minister,” he added.
The statement, a copy of which was obtained by AFP, said that Vucevic spoke with Reshetnikov and a Russian delegation, about the “further strengthening of economic and overall cooperation between the two countries.”
Von der Leyen had arrived in Belgrade earlier Friday as part of a tour of six Balkan nations, and duly met with President Aleksandar Vucic.
The latter did not take part at this week’s summit of the BRICS group — an alliance of emerging economies — in Russia.
“My presence here today, in the context of my fourth trip to the Balkans since I took office, is a very clear sign that Serbia’s future is in the European Union,” von der Leyen told a joint press conference with Vucic.
“The partnership between the European Union and Serbia is getting stronger,” she added.
Serbia, which aspires to join the 27-nation bloc, has maintained friendly ties with Russia and has refused to sanction Moscow for its invasion of Ukraine.
On Friday, Vucic stressed his country’s commitment to joining the EU.
“We will continue on our European path,” he said, but added that Serbia will “try to preserve our friendship and partnership with all the others also.”
During her four-day Balkan tour, which started on Wednesday, von der Leyen pledged that membership expansion would be high on the Brussels agenda.
Discussions around EU enlargement in the Balkan region of almost 18 million people stretch back 20 years.
The six countries — Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Kosovo, Montenegro, North Macedonia and Serbia — are in different stages on their path toward membership of the bloc.
The EU Commission chief will visit Montenegro and Kosovo on Saturday.


Nearly 400 authors call for boycott of Israeli cultural institutions

Nearly 400 authors call for boycott of Israeli cultural institutions
Updated 42 min 6 sec ago
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Nearly 400 authors call for boycott of Israeli cultural institutions

Nearly 400 authors call for boycott of Israeli cultural institutions
  • Writers including Sally Rooney and Arundhati Roy say those who stay silent over Gaza are ‘complicit in genocide’
  • Author Lee Child warns boycott will hit Israel’s ‘only voices for peace and common sense’

LONDON: A group of almost 400 authors have called for a boycott of Israeli cultural institutions.

The writers, including Sally Rooney and Arundhati Roy, say Israeli publishers, book festivals and literary agencies that have not spoken out against the war in Gaza are “complicit in genocide.”

The unpublished letter, organized by the Palestine Festival of Literature, claims that the “genocide … is the biggest war on children this century.”

It adds: “Culture has played an integral role in normalizing these injustices. Israeli cultural institutions, often working directly with the state, have been crucial in obfuscating, disguising and art-washing the dispossession and oppression of millions of Palestinians for decades.

“We cannot in good conscience engage with Israeli institutions without interrogating their relationship to apartheid and displacement.”

The Fossil Free Books pressure group, which worked to get literary festivals to cut ties with sponsors such as Baillie Gifford over the war earlier this year, is supporting the letter, alongside a number of Booker prize nominees. A full list of signatories is set to be released next week.

“We will not work with Israeli cultural institutions that are complicit or have remained silent observers of the overwhelming oppression of Palestinians,” the letter, seen by The Times, said.

“We will not cooperate with Israeli institutions including publishers, festivals, literary agencies and publications that are complicit in violating Palestinian rights.”

The move to boycott Israeli cultural institutions has also been criticized, including by “Jack Reacher” author Lee Child, who said writers should not “attack the very people whose hearts are still in the right place,” including Israel’s “only voices for peace and common sense.”

Child said: “They are firm allies in the struggle for an equitable outcome, and to demonise them is to shoot the Palestinian cause in the foot. Personally, I support a full two-state solution, and I’m a pragmatic person, so my instinct is to partner with Israelis who think the same way. Building bridges with them is the way to go. Canceling them is nuts.”

Larry Finlay, a former publishing chief at Transworld books, told The Times: “The target of (the signatories’) ire is just wrong because the people who will suffer from this will be Israelis who are on the left and anti-Netanyahu.

“There is no wisdom for this boycott, which is born out of hatred and antisemitism.”


UK surveillance missions over Gaza could support ICC war crimes investigation, Defense Ministry says

UK surveillance missions over Gaza could support ICC war crimes investigation, Defense Ministry says
Updated 25 October 2024
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UK surveillance missions over Gaza could support ICC war crimes investigation, Defense Ministry says

UK surveillance missions over Gaza could support ICC war crimes investigation, Defense Ministry says
  • Spokesperson for MOD said while primary mission remains hostage rescue, UK would consider requests from international authorities for evidence

LONDON: The UK’s Ministry of Defense has confirmed that intelligence gathered by Royal Air Force surveillance flights over Gaza could be shared with the International Criminal Court to support potential investigations into war crimes.

The RAF has reportedly flown more than 600 missions since December, using Shadow R1 aircraft, to gather intelligence aimed exclusively at aiding in the recovery of hostages taken during the Oct. 7, 2023 attack on Israel by Hamas, the MOD said.

A spokesperson for the MOD explained that, while the primary mission remains hostage rescue, the UK would consider requests from international authorities for evidence that might aid war crimes investigations.

“In line with our international obligations, we would consider any formal request from the International Criminal Court to provide information relating to investigations into war crimes,” the spokesperson said, affirming the UK’s commitment to international humanitarian law.

The intelligence collected by the RAF may provide critical insight into conditions in Gaza amid escalating hostilities.

The MOD underscored, however, that UK armed forces are not combatants in the conflict.

“Our mandate is narrowly defined to focus on securing the release of the hostages only, including British nationals,” the spokesperson added.

“The RAF routinely conducts unarmed flights for this sole purpose, and any intelligence provided to our allies is shared only where we are satisfied it will be used in accordance with international humanitarian law.”

Recent reports have drawn attention to the scale of these intelligence operations, with data from a Canadian researcher suggesting over 250 sorties had been completed by mid-2024. Al Jazeera reported that more than 600 flights have been conducted, reflecting the UK’s concerted effort to locate hostages amid an intensifying conflict.

The ICC has expressed interest in addressing alleged war crimes on both sides.

In May, the ICC prosecutor announced intentions to seek arrest warrants for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Defense Minister Yoav Gallant, accusing them of “starvation of civilians as a method of warfare” and “intentionally directing attacks against a civilian population” since Oct. 8, 2023, one day after Hamas’ initial attack.

Arrest warrants were also sought for senior Hamas leaders, including Yahya Sinwar and Ismail Haniyeh, who were accused of crimes against humanity. Both leaders were killed in recent Israeli strikes.

The UK Defense Journal highlighted the continuing scale of RAF missions in the region, indicating that British intelligence efforts remain focused on securing the safe release of hostages, with no involvement in direct combat or provision of weaponry.

This approach, the MOD emphasized, reflects a humanitarian mission with strict adherence to international legal standards.


3 Indian soldiers and 2 civilians are killed in an alleged rebel ambush in Kashmir

3 Indian soldiers and 2 civilians are killed in an alleged rebel ambush in Kashmir
Updated 58 min 43 sec ago
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3 Indian soldiers and 2 civilians are killed in an alleged rebel ambush in Kashmir

3 Indian soldiers and 2 civilians are killed in an alleged rebel ambush in Kashmir
  • Two soldiers and two civilians working as porters with the Indian military were killed and three other soldiers were wounded, police said.
  • One soldier later died at a hospital, they said. The military said it was a brief firefight and gave no other details

SRINAGAR, India: Three Indian soldiers and their two civilian porters were killed in a rebel ambush in Indian-controlled Kashmir, officials said Friday.
Police said rebels sprayed bullets at an army vehicle carrying troops close to the highly militarized line of control near the resort town of Gulmarg on Thursday night. The de facto frontier divides the disputed Kashmir between India and Pakistan, which they both claim in its entirety.
Two soldiers and two civilians working as porters with the Indian military were killed and three other soldiers were wounded, police said. One soldier later died at a hospital, they said. The military said it was a brief firefight and gave no other details.
There was no independent confirmation of the incident.
On Sunday, gunmen fatally shot at least seven people and injured five others working on a strategic tunnel project near another resort town of Sonamarg. Police blamed militants fighting against Indian rule for decades for the attack.
Militants in the Indian-administered part of Kashmir have been fighting New Delhi’s rule since 1989. Many Muslim Kashmiris support the rebels’ goal of uniting the territory, either under Pakistani rule or as an independent country.
India insists the Kashmir militancy is Pakistan-sponsored terrorism. Pakistan denies the charge, and many Kashmiris consider it a legitimate freedom struggle. Tens of thousands of civilians, rebels and government forces have been killed in the conflict.
Nuclear-armed rivals India and Pakistan have fought two of their three wars over Kashmir since they gained independence from British colonial rule in 1947.