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Two-year-old US citizen deported ‘with no meaningful process’

Two-year-old US citizen deported ‘with no meaningful process’
“It is illegal and unconstitutional to deport, detain for deportation, or recommend deportation of a US citizen,” Doughty said. (REUTERS)
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Updated 26 April 2025

Two-year-old US citizen deported ‘with no meaningful process’

Two-year-old US citizen deported ‘with no meaningful process’
  • “It is illegal and unconstitutional to deport, detain for deportation, or recommend deportation of a US citizen,” Doughty said

WASHINGTON:The Trump administration appeared to have deported a 2-year-old US citizen “with no meaningful process,” a federal judge said on Friday, as the child’s father sought to have her returned to the United States.
US District Judge Terry A. Doughty said the girl, who was referred to as “V.M.L.” in court documents, was deported with her mother.
“It is illegal and unconstitutional to deport, detain for deportation, or recommend deportation of a US citizen,” Doughty said.
He scheduled a hearing for May 19 “in the interest of dispelling our strong suspicion that the Government just deported a US citizen with no meaningful process.”
V.M.L. was apprehended by US Immigration and Customs Enforcement on Tuesday with her mother, Jenny Carolina Lopez Villela, and older sister when Villela attended a routine appointment at its New Orleans office, according to a filing by Trish Mack, who said the infant’s father asked her to act as the child’s custodian.
According to Mack, when V.M.L.’s father briefly spoke to Villela, he could hear her and the children crying. During that time, according to a court document, he reminded her that their daughter was a US citizen “and could not be deported.”
However, prosecutors said Villela, who has legal custody, told ICE that she wanted to retain custody of the girl and have her go with her to Honduras. They said the man claiming to be V.M.L.’s father had not presented himself to ICE despite requests to do so.
“It is therefore in V.M.L.’s best interest that she remain in the lawful custody of her mother,” Trump administration officials said in a filing on Friday. “Further, V.M.L. is not at risk of irreparable harm because she is a US citizen.”
V.M.L. is not prohibited from entering the US, prosecutors added.
The Department of Homeland Security and the Justice Department did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
The American Civil Liberties Union described V.M.L,’s case -and another similar — as a “shocking ... abuse of power.”
“These actions stand in direct violation of ICE’s own written and informal directives, which mandate coordination for the care of minor children with willing caretakers – regardless of immigration status – when deportations are being carried out,” it said.
US President Donald Trump, whose presidential campaigns have focused heavily on immigration, said earlier this month he wanted to deport some violent criminals who are US citizens to El Salvadoran prisons.
The comments raised concern about a proposal that has alarmed civil rights advocates and is viewed by many legal scholars as unconstitutional.
The Supreme Court has ordered the Trump administration, which has already deported hundreds of people to El Salvador, to “facilitate and effectuate” the return of Maryland resident Kilmar Abrego Garcia, who was sent to the country on March 15 despite an order protecting him from deportation.


Judge finds the Trump administration unconstitutionally targeted noncitizens over Gaza war protests

Updated 7 sec ago

Judge finds the Trump administration unconstitutionally targeted noncitizens over Gaza war protests

Judge finds the Trump administration unconstitutionally targeted noncitizens over Gaza war protests
Judge Young agreed with several university associations that the policy they described as ideological deportation violates the First Amendment
Trump administration had launched a coordinated effort to target students and scholars who had criticized Israel or showed sympathy for Palestinians

BOSTON: A federal judge ruled Tuesday that the Trump administration’s efforts to deport noncitizens who protested the war in Gaza was unconstitutional.
US District Judge William Young in Boston agreed with several university associations that the policy they described as ideological deportation violates the First Amendment.
“This case -– perhaps the most important ever to fall within the jurisdiction of this district court –- squarely presents the issue whether non-citizens lawfully present here in United States actually have the same free speech rights as the rest of us. The Court answers this Constitutional question unequivocally ‘yes, they do,’” Young, a nominee of Republican President Ronald Reagan, wrote.
An email to the Homeland Security department for comment was not immediately returned.
The ruling came after a trial during which lawyers for the associations presented witnesses who testified that the Trump administration had launched a coordinated effort to target students and scholars who had criticized Israel or showed sympathy for Palestinians.
“Not since the McCarthy era have immigrants been the target of such intense repression for lawful political speech,” Ramya Krishnan, senior staff attorney at the Knight First Amendment Institute, told the court. “The policy creates a cloud of fear over university communities, and it is at war with the First Amendment.”
Lawyers for the Trump administration put up witnesses who testified there was no ideological deportation policy as the plaintiffs contended.
“There is no policy to revoke visas on the basis of protected speech,” Victoria Santora told the court. “The evidence presented at this trial will show that plaintiffs are challenging nothing more than government enforcement of immigration laws.”
John Armstrong, the senior bureau official in the Bureau of Consular Affairs, testified that visa revocations were based on longstanding immigration law. Armstrong acknowledged he played a role in the visa revocation of several high-profile activists, including Rumeysa Ozturk and Mahmoud Khalil, and was shown memos endorsing their removal.
Armstrong also insisted that visa revocations were not based on protected speech and rejected accusations that there was a policy of targeting someone for their ideology.
One witness testified that the campaign targeted more than 5,000 pro-Palestinian protesters. Out of the 5,000 names reviewed, investigators wrote reports on about 200 who had potentially violated US law, Peter Hatch of ICE’s Homeland Security Investigations Unit testified. Until this year, Hatch said, he could not recall a student protester being referred for a visa revocation.
Among the report subjects was Palestinian activist and Columbia University graduate Khalil, who was released last month after 104 days in federal immigration detention. Khalil has become a symbol of Trump’s clampdown on the protests.
Another was the Tufts University student Ozturk, who was released in May from six weeks in detention after being arrested on a suburban Boston street. She said she was illegally detained following an op-ed she co-wrote last year criticizing her school’s response to the war in Gaza.

Italy PM Meloni urges Gaza aid flotilla to ‘stop now’

Italy PM Meloni urges Gaza aid flotilla to ‘stop now’
Updated 32 sec ago

Italy PM Meloni urges Gaza aid flotilla to ‘stop now’

Italy PM Meloni urges Gaza aid flotilla to ‘stop now’
  • Insisting on a confrontation with Israel could upset the current “fragile balance” that could lead to peace based on the plan proposed by US President Donald Trump, Meloni said

ROME: Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni on Tuesday called on the international aid flotilla trying to deliver aid to Gaza to immediately stop their mission.
Insisting on a confrontation with Israel could upset the current “fragile balance” that could lead to peace based on the plan proposed by US President Donald Trump, Meloni said.
“Many would be happy to disrupt” that plan, Meloni said in a statement.
“I fear that the flotilla’s attempt to breach the Israeli naval blockade could provide a pretext for this. Also for this reason, I believe the Flotilla should stop now,” she added.

 

 


France investigates suspected ‘shadow fleet’ oil tanker anchored off coast

France investigates suspected ‘shadow fleet’ oil tanker anchored off coast
Updated 59 min 47 sec ago

France investigates suspected ‘shadow fleet’ oil tanker anchored off coast

France investigates suspected ‘shadow fleet’ oil tanker anchored off coast
  • The vessel is listed under British and European Union sanctions against Russia
  • The crude oil tanker left the Russian port of Primorsk on September 20

PARIS: The French Navy said on Tuesday that authorities were investigating a possible infraction by the oil tanker Boracay, a vessel suspected of belonging to the so-called “shadow fleet” involved in the Russian oil trade.
The vessel is listed under British and European Union sanctions against Russia. It was detained by Estonian authorities earlier this year for sailing without a valid country flag. Shadow fleet tankers typically have opaque ownership and insurance and are often more than 20 years old.
The crude oil tanker left the Russian port of Primorsk on September 20, according to MarineTraffic data. It sailed through the Baltic Sea and over the top of Denmark before entering the North Sea and transiting west through the Channel.
Ship tracking data shows that the 2007-built tanker was being shadowed by a French warship after it rounded France’s northwestern tip, before altering course and heading east toward the French coast. It is currently at anchor near Saint Nazaire.

CREW FAIL TO PROVE VESSEL’S NATIONALITY
The French Navy said an investigation was underway. The Brest prosecutor told Reuters a probe had been opened after the crew failed to provide proof of the vessel’s nationality and failed to comply with orders.
Britain and the EU imposed separate sanctions on the crude oil tanker in October 2024 and February 2025.
The EU said the vessel was linked to the transport of Russian crude oil and petroleum products “while practicing irregular and high-risk shipping practices.”
Britain said the vessel was “involved in activity whose object or effect is to destabilize Ukraine … or to obtain a benefit from or support the government of Russia” in the transport of oil or oil products that originated in Russia to a third country.
The vessel, which changed its name to Boracay — or on some shipping databases Pushpa — in December 2024, was previously named Kiwala. Ships keep the same IMO identification number throughout their lives, but they may change names.


Congo military court sentences former President Kabila to death for treason

Congo military court sentences former President Kabila to death for treason
Updated 30 September 2025

Congo military court sentences former President Kabila to death for treason

Congo military court sentences former President Kabila to death for treason
  • The government said Kabilia had collaborated with Rwanda and the M23 rebel group
  • Kabila had lived outside of Congo in self-imposed exile but returned in April to Goma

KINSHASA: A military court in Congo on Tuesday convicted former President Joseph Kabila of treason and other charges and sentenced him to death.
Kabila, who has been on trial in absentia since July and whose whereabouts are unknown, was accused of treason, involvement in an insurrection movement, conspiracy, and supporting terrorism. The prosecutor asked for the death penalty.
The government said Kabilia had collaborated with Rwanda and the M23 rebel group that seized key cities in eastern Congo in January in a lightning assault and has since occupied the cities. Kabila has denied the allegations.
In May, the country’s Senate voted to repeal his immunity from prosecution, a move Kabila denounced at the time as dictatorial.
Kabila had lived outside of Congo in self-imposed exile but returned in April to Goma, one of the cities held by the rebel group. It is not known if he stayed there, and his current location is unknown.


China court sentences 11 members of Myanmar-based crime syndicate to death

China court sentences 11 members of Myanmar-based crime syndicate to death
Updated 30 September 2025

China court sentences 11 members of Myanmar-based crime syndicate to death

China court sentences 11 members of Myanmar-based crime syndicate to death
  • The sentences came shortly after China on Sunday separately sentenced former Minister of Agriculture and Rural Affairs Tang Renjian to death
  • China issued arrest warrants for members of the Ming family in November 2023 on suspicion of fraud, murder and illegal detention

BANGKOK: A court in China sentenced 11 people to death on Monday for their roles in a family-run crime syndicate accused of running illegal gambling and scam operations worth more than $1.4 billion and for the deaths of disobedient workers.
The Wenzhou Intermediate People’s Court sentenced Ming Guoping, Ming Zhenzhen, Zhou Weichang — all members of a powerful family in Kokkang, Myanmar — to death along with eight others, according to a court statement.
The court also handed death sentences suspended for two years to five others, while a further 12 defendants received jail sentences of between five and 24 years. Two-year suspended death sentences are often converted to life in prison.
The sentences came shortly after China on Sunday separately sentenced former Minister of Agriculture and Rural Affairs Tang Renjian to death with reprieve for taking bribes. Tang took bribes of more than 268 million yuan ($38 million) in cash and property between 2007 and 2024, according to a statement by the Intermediate People’s Court of Changchun in the northeastern Jilin province.
China issued arrest warrants for members of the Ming family in November 2023 on suspicion of fraud, murder and illegal detention as part of a crackdown on illegal scam operations near the border with Myanmar.
The syndicate’s crimes resulted in the deaths of 10 workers and injuries to two others who tried to escape the scam centers it ran, the court statement said.
The centers, in which criminals run sophisticated online scams targeting people all over the world, have proliferated in countries in Southeast Asia, including Myanmar, Laos and Cambodia. They often use trafficked workers who are forced to conduct romance-based investment scams as part of a globalized industry that the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime estimates is worth $40 billion annually.
China is cracking down on scam centers in the region through joint operations or coordinating with local police forces. In February, China, Myanmar and Thailand exerted pressure on scam centers located along the Thai-Myanmar border, resulting in the release of more than 7,000 workers, most of whom were Chinese citizens.