The AI revolution is coming. But it must belong to the people. Otherwise, it will never become a revolution. (SDAIA photo)
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President Donald Trump鈥檚 historic visit to 海角直播 was not merely another high-profile diplomatic stop. It was a signal, one that reverberates far beyond ceremonial pageantry or economic accords. With a sweeping agenda anchored in regional security and technological advancement, the visit marked a profound turning point: the introduction of artificial intelligence as a centerpiece in reimagining international alliances and national futures.
As 海角直播 deepens its strategic commitment to AI, the spotlight now turns to a less discussed 鈥 yet far more consequential 鈥 question: Who truly owns the AI revolution?
For too long, the narrative has belonged to technologists. From Silicon Valley labs to national AI strategies, the story of AI has been told in the language of algorithms, architectures, and compute. And while the technical infrastructure is essential, we argue that such a narrow view of AI is not only incomplete, it is dangerous.
When the American Institute of Artificial Intelligence and Quantum was launched in the US in 2016, the institutional landscape for AI was highly specialized. Data scientists, computer engineers, and mathematicians dominated the discourse. Policymakers and business leaders, overwhelmed by complexity, often stood at a distance. AI was regarded as something technical 鈥 a toolset, a model, an optimization system.
The same pattern is now emerging in 海角直播 and across the Gulf. Government agencies are in search of use cases. Consultants are offering solutions in search of problems. Infrastructure projects are underway to create sovereign large language models and national AI platforms. In these efforts, AI is often reduced to a software engineering challenge 鈥 or worse, a procurement exercise.
But this lens fails to capture the essence of the revolution underway. What鈥檚 at stake is not simply how nations compute. It鈥檚 how they think, organize, and act in a new age of machine cognition.
We鈥檝e long argued that AI cannot 鈥 and must not 鈥 be the exclusive domain of technologists. A true revolution occurs only when the masses engage. Just as the internet went mainstream not through protocols and standards, but through wide-scale adoption and imaginative use, AI must be demystified and integrated into the fabric of society.
It is neither feasible nor necessary to turn an entire nation into data scientists. We need a nation of informed leaders, innovators, teachers, managers, and citizens who can speak the language of AI, not in code, but in context.
This conviction led AIAIQ to become the world鈥檚 first applied AI institute focused not on producing more PhDs, but on educating professionals across sectors 鈥 from finance and healthcare to logistics and public service. Our mission was clear: to build a movement of AI adoption engineering, centered on human understanding, social responsibility, and economic impact.
History has shown that every technological revolution requires more than invention. It requires meaning. When the automobile first arrived in America, it was met with skepticism. Roads were unprepared. Public opinion was divided. Without storytelling, explanation, and cultural adaptation, the car might have remained a niche novelty.
AI is no different, but the stakes are higher. Unlike past revolutions, AI directly threatens to reshape or eliminate jobs across virtually all sectors. It raises moral questions about decision-making, power, privacy, and the nature of intelligence itself. Without a serious effort to prepare populations, the result will be confusion, fear, and backlash.
Adoption is not just about teaching Python or TensorFlow. It is about building cognitive readiness in society 鈥 a collective ability to make sense of AI as a force that operates both with us and around us.
What鈥檚 at stake is not simply how nations compute. It鈥檚 how they think, organize, and act in a new age of machine cognition.
Ali Naqvi and Mohammed Al-Qarni
AIAIQ鈥檚 work in the US, and now in the Kingdom, reflects this ethos. We don鈥檛 approach AI as a product to be sold. We approach it as a paradigm to be understood, negotiated, and lived.
Over nearly a decade of pioneering applied AI education, we鈥檝e identified four essential elements for ensuring that technological revolutions 鈥 especially this one 鈥 take root meaningfully within society.
People need help interpreting what AI actually is and how it is changing their world. It鈥檚 not just a black box; it鈥檚 a new kind of collaborator, a new model of thought.
Technologies cannot remain in labs or behind firewalls. They must be translated into the language and workflow of everyday people. Mass understanding is more vital than mass compute.
Every revolution carries moral implications. If not carefully navigated, AI can create a deep dissonance between traditional societal values and new forms of digital governance.
Above all, people must see themselves in the revolution. They must feel empowered to participate, to lead, and to shape what comes next.
Much has been made of 鈥渟overeign AI鈥 鈥 the ambition of nations to build homegrown LLMs and nationalized data infrastructure. Several Gulf nations are investing heavily in this vision. And yet, we caution: True sovereignty is not measured by the size of your datacenter, but by the sophistication of your human capital.
You can localize your AI stack, but unless you cultivate a generation of researchers, engineers, business innovators, and public thinkers, your systems will be technologically impressive but strategically hollow. Sovereignty is about stewardship. That requires education, experimentation, and the freedom to adapt.
As 海角直播 targets massive economic transformation, the challenge is not just to build smart systems, but to build a smart society that knows what to do with them.
President Trump鈥檚 visit, and the unprecedented alignment between American and Saudi priorities around AI, is not just symbolic. It marks a deeper shift in how global partnerships are defined. Oil once defined alliances. Now, intelligence 鈥 both human and machine 鈥 will.
For the first time, nations are collaborating not to dominate territory, but to co-develop cognition. The tools may be digital, but the outcome will be profoundly human.
The alignment between global and local initiatives in 海角直播 represents a shared belief that the future is not only coded in silicon but shaped in classrooms, boardrooms, war rooms, and living rooms.
The AI revolution is coming. But it must belong to the people. Otherwise, it will never become a revolution.
鈥 Mohammed Al-Qarni is a leading voice in AI policy and governance in the Gulf and Ali Naqvi is the founder of the American Institute of Artificial Intelligence and Quantum.
Disclaimer: Views expressed by writers in this section are their own and do not necessarily reflect Arab News' point of view
Rebuilding wrecked Syria vital for regional stability: UN/node/2620046/middle-east
Rebuilding wrecked Syria vital for regional stability: UN
Updated 40 sec ago
AFP
GENEVA: After 14 years of destruction, Syria must be swiftly rebuilt to bring stability to the country and the wider region, a top UN official in the war-ravaged nation told AFP.
Reconstruction is one of the most significant challenges facing Syria鈥檚 new Islamist authorities after the overthrow of longtime ruler Bashar Assad last December.
鈥淭he international community should definitely rush into rebuilding Syria,鈥 Rawhi Afaghani, the UN Development Programme鈥檚 deputy representative in Syria, told AFP this week during a visit to Geneva.
鈥淏eing able to help the country to rebound and come out of this war and come out of this destruction is for the Syrians themselves, but also for the stability and the good of the whole region,鈥 he said in the interview.
The Syrian civil war, which erupted in 2011 with Assad鈥檚 brutal repression of anti-government protests, killed over half a million people and devastated the country鈥檚 infrastructure.
The World Bank this week estimated that Syria鈥檚 post-war reconstruction could cost up to $216 billion.
Afaghani said he could not put a price tag on rebuilding Syria, but described the needs as 鈥渕assive.鈥
Across the country, he said governors had told him about the massive need for housing, schools, and health centers, as well as electricity and water.
Complicating the clean-up efforts are the vast quantities of unexploded ordnance littering the entire country, including within mountains of rubble that need to be cleared, he said.
鈥楾别苍蝉颈辞苍蝉鈥&苍产蝉辫;
More than one million Syrian refugees have already returned from abroad and nearly double as many have returned to their places of origin after being displaced inside the country, UN figures show.
While those returns are a good sign, Afaghani warned that they were 鈥減utting a lot of pressure on the infrastructure, on the transportation, on the education, on the bakeries.鈥
鈥淧eople are returning to destroyed houses or houses that are actually occupied by other people,鈥 he said.
Afaghani warned that the strain on infrastructure 鈥渃ould lead to community tensions.鈥
At the same time, he said the lack of infrastructure, services and jobs was dissuading many Syrians who want to return home from doing so.
鈥淲e thought there would be a much higher rate of return,鈥 he acknowledged, pointing out that most of those who have returned from abroad had left often difficult conditions in neighboring Jordan and Lebanon.
From Europe, 鈥渨e don鈥檛 see that massive return,鈥 he said.
Afaghani voiced hope that swift reconstruction could usher in 鈥渁 stable Syria,鈥 which in turn would draw more returns from Europe.
鈥淭hose are high-skilled people 鈥 they can rebuild Syria,鈥 he said.
Those returnees, he insisted, could also 鈥渂e a big, good influence in the whole region from an economic perspective, and from a peace-building perspective.鈥
ISLAMABAD: The wife of slain journalist Arshad Sharif and senior media personalities renewed their demand for a judicial commission to probe his killing this week, as they observed his third death anniversary in a solemn gathering at the National Press Club (NPC) in Islamabad.
Sharif, an outspoken critic of Pakistan鈥檚 government and its powerful military, was killed when police shot at his car on the outskirts of Kenya鈥檚 capital Nairobi in Oct. 23, 2022. Kenyan police later said the killing was a case of mistaken identity. However, a team of Pakistani investigators who probed his alleged murder, released a report in December 2022 saying that Sharif鈥檚 killing was a 鈥減lanned, targeted assassination.鈥
Sharif, who hosted a current affairs show on a local television channel, had to leave the country after several cases related to charges of sedition and others were filed against him shortly before his killing. He was believed to have been in the United Arab Emirates since he left Pakistan and had traveled to Kenya where he was killed.
The late journalist鈥檚 mother had also written a letter to Pakistan鈥檚 then chief justice in November 2022, demanding a 鈥渉igh-powered judicial commission鈥 probe Sharif鈥檚 killing. She had demanded the inclusion of senior Supreme Court judges in the commission.
鈥淢y demand is that there should be a judicial commission to probe Arshad Sharif鈥檚 murder,鈥 Javeria Siddique, Sharif鈥檚 widow, spoke at a gathering held at the NPP on Thursday to pay tribute to Sharif on his third death anniversary.
鈥淏ecause the constitutional bench is not taking up our case like the way it should be taken, I want the serving judges to hear this.鈥
Journalist Hamid Mir is addressing an event to pay tribute to slain fellow journalist Arshad Sharif in Islamabad, Pakistan, on October 23, 2025. (AN photo)
As per the Pakistan-based media and development sector watchdog, Freedom Network, around 151 journalists and media workers were killed in Pakistan from May 2000 and August 2024. Sharif鈥檚 killing also highlighted the dangers journalists in Pakistan face amid growing censorship and press freedom violations in the country.
Siddique urged Pakistani journalists and members of the civil society to stand united in seeking justice for Sharif鈥檚 killing. She called on all media stakeholders and journalists to meet the chief justice.
鈥淭hey should demand that journalists, who form the fourth pillar of the state, should not be harassed,鈥 she said. 鈥淎rshad Sharif should get justice immediately and those 14 journalists killed in the last two years should also get justice.鈥
鈥橵ERY HIGH-PROFILE MURDER鈥
Afzal Butt, president of the Pakistan Federal Union of Journalists (PFUJ), said the complexity of the case required that it be probed internationally.
鈥淭his is a very high-profile murder. It happened in a foreign country,鈥 Butt noted. 鈥淚t cannot be probed by the police of Kenya or the police of Pakistan alone.鈥
Journalist Matiullah Jan is addressing an event to pay tribute to slain fellow journalist Arshad Sharif in Islamabad, Pakistan, on October 23, 2025. (AN photo)
He demanded a UN fact-finding commission be set up, one that can investigate Kenyan government officials and take statements from them and their Pakistani counterparts.
The PFUJ president urged the Supreme Court to take up Sharif鈥檚 killing with urgency.
鈥淲e request the chief justice of Pakistan, Justice Yahya Afridi and the head of the constitutional bench, Justice Amin-ud-Din Khan, to immediately investigate the suo motu case taken in connection with Arshad Sharif鈥檚 murder,鈥 he added.
Siddique said she was also pursuing the case internationally, calling on journalists to pursue the UN and the European Union for a probe too.
鈥淭he case is going on in Kenya, and I have filed an appeal in the Supreme Court,鈥 she said. 鈥淭he issue is that the case is not being heard here in Pakistan.鈥
NPC President Azhar Jatoi echoed the family鈥檚 demand for a judicial commission and described the situation as 鈥渄eeply concerning.鈥
鈥淭he requirement of justice is that the demand of his family should be met,鈥 he said. 鈥淭he demand is for the judicial commission.鈥
Jatoi noted that it was becoming increasingly unsafe for journalists to work in the country. He said some journalists were killed this year while others were intimidated and harassed, lamenting that Pakistan was among the 鈥渢op 10 most dangerous countries for journalists.鈥
鈥淚t is a very difficult time. Journalists are in danger of losing their lives,鈥 Jatoi noted. 鈥淭hey do not have the freedom to write. The use of pens is restricted.鈥
WASHINGTON: US President Donald Trump said on Thursday that all trade talks with Canada were terminated following what he called a fraudulent advertisement in which former President Ronald Reagan spoke negatively about tariffs.
鈥淏ased on their egregious behavior, ALL TRADE NEGOTIATIONS WITH CANADA ARE HEREBY TERMINATED,鈥 Trump wrote on Truth Social.
Ontario Premier Doug Ford said earlier this week that the ad with anti-tariff messaging had caught Trump鈥檚 attention. The ad showed Reagan, a Republican, criticizing tariffs on foreign goods while saying they caused job losses and trade wars.
鈥淚 heard that the president heard our ad. I鈥檓 sure he wasn鈥檛 too happy,鈥 Ford said on Tuesday.
Trump has used tariffs as leverage on many countries around the world.
His trade war has increased US tariffs to their highest levels since the 1930s and he has regularly threatened more duties, sparking concerns among businesses and economists.
Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney told reporters on Thursday that Canada will not allow unfair US access to its markets if talks on various trade deals with Washington fail.
Trump imposed tariffs on Canadian steel, aluminum and autos earlier this year, prompting Ottawa to respond in kind. The two sides have been in talks for weeks on a potential deal for the steel and aluminum sectors.
Next year, the US, Canada and Mexico are due to review their 2020 continental free-trade agreement.
Trump says declaration of war not needed on drug cartels
Trump: I think we鈥檙e just going to kill people that are bringing drugs into our country
Updated 49 min 27 sec ago
Reuters
WASHINGTON: US President Donald Trump said on Thursday that his administration plans to brief the US Congress on operations against drug cartels and that even though he did not need a declaration of war, operations against cartels on land would be next.
The US military has been increasing its presence in the Caribbean, including deployments of guided-missile destroyers, F-35 fighter jets, a nuclear submarine and thousands of troops.
鈥淲ell, I don鈥檛 think we鈥檙e going to necessarily ask for a declaration of war. I think we鈥檙e just going to kill people that are bringing drugs into our country. OK? We鈥檙e going to kill them,鈥 Trump told reporters at the White House. The United States has carried out a number of strikes against suspected drug vessels in the Caribbean and Pacific Ocean since early September, killing nearly 40 people. While the Pentagon has provided little information, it has said some of those strikes have been against vessels near Venezuela.
鈥淣ow they are coming in by land ... you know, the land is going to be next,鈥 Trump added, echoing comments he has made in recent weeks.
Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro, speaking at a live event in Caracas on Thursday, warned that if the US ever intervened in the country, 鈥渢he working class would rise and a general insurrectional strike would be declared in the streets until power is regained,鈥 adding that 鈥渕illions of men and women with rifles would march across the country.鈥
Last week, Reuters was first to report that two alleged drug traffickers survived a US military strike in the Caribbean. They were rescued and brought to a US Navy warship before being repatriated to their home countries of Colombia and Ecuador.
Sitting next to Trump at the same event on Thursday, US Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth defended the decision to repatriate two survivors, likening it to battlefield practices during the Iraq and Afghanistan wars.
鈥淚n those conflicts, we captured thousands on the battlefield and handed over 99 percent to host-nation authorities,鈥 Hegseth said. 鈥淒id we always like the outcome? Not always. But it was the standard, and it鈥檚 the same here.鈥
One family fled Afghanistan. Then US deportations scattered them across the world
Families such as the Hussainis are suffering the cascading consequences of larger political shifts as countries tighten asylum policies and turn away refugees
Updated 19 min 34 sec ago
AP
As they walked up to the thick metal pillars of the border wall dividing Tijuana and San Diego, the Hussaini siblings carried nothing from their lives in Afghanistan than a hazy fantasy of what awaited them on the other side.
Amir, 21, and his sisters, Suraiya, 26, and Bano, 27, arrived in northern Mexico with an appointment for Jan. 24, four days after US President Donald Trump took office.
That was the day they were supposed to enter the US and make their case, marking what they thought would be an end to the repression by the Taliban after the withdrawal of American troops in 2021, and to their 17,500-mile journey by foot, canoe, bus and plane across the world.
That was all before the door to asylum slammed shut along the US southern border moments after Trump took office. Trump鈥檚 victory was based in no small part on support from voters who embraced his hard-line immigration views. Within days, his administration had transformed what it meant to seek refuge in the US, casting aside an ethos of helping the persecuted that is nearly as old as the country itself.
Families such as the Hussainis are suffering the cascading consequences of larger political shifts as countries tighten asylum policies and turn away refugees. In Afghanistan, whose tumultuous history is intertwined with American military and foreign policy, the expulsion carried an added sting because the Hussainis believed they would find safe harbor in the US.
Children and other Afghans wait in line outside of a tent in an Afghan refugee camp on November 4, 2021 in Holloman Air Force Base, New Mexico. (AFP)
Instead, Amir watched his sisters being torn away from him by American border agents under the harsh fluorescent lights of a detention facility. It was the last time he saw them.
Half a year later, the family has been dispersed to different countries as part of the administration鈥檚 push to send immigrants and refugees to far-flung, unfamiliar and often dangerous places. One sister is trying to navigate life in the far reaches of South America. The second is marooned in Central America. Amir is back in Afghanistan, plagued by fear in the very country the family fled.
鈥淲e had reached the end of our journey 鈥 and our hopes were completely shattered,鈥 Suraiya said. 鈥淚 can鈥檛 necessarily call it a betrayal, but the fact that they didn鈥檛 interview us, ask about our fears or why we fled our country. It all seemed very cruel.鈥 Watching a future in Afghanistan dissolve
For most of their lives, even as their homeland was riven by war, Suraiya and her siblings never dreamed of leaving.
But as the years rolled on, they watched the life they were building dissolve. That was when they turned to the US, which once funneled hundreds of billions of dollars in humanitarian and military aid into Afghanistan, as the place that could offer them a new life.
The Hussainis grew up in an area run by local gangs on the fringes of Kabul, the capital, after the fall of the Taliban in 2001. Their father was a metalworker. Their mother could not attend school but wanted everything for her children.
After centuries of targeted massacres and persecution, the Hussainis鈥 ethnic minority group, the Hazaras, felt a respite with the Taliban out of power. For women, the doors to education and work finally were opened.
鈥淚 never thought I would go to America. I hadn鈥檛 even seen American soldiers up close until they left and the Taliban came back鈥 four years ago, Suraiya said. 鈥淢y family was in Afghanistan. I just wanted to be here doing the things my parents were never able to do.鈥
Amir, an aspiring musician with thick, curly black hair and an optimistic smile that crinkles the corners of his eyes, would spend weekends working as a wedding DJ. Suraiya, his more reserved older sister, studied computer science in a public university sitting side by side with men.
Suraiya dreamed of a career, but that changed in her third semester in college in 2021, when the Taliban-led government resumed a a yearslong effort to systematically exclude women from much of society.
Taliban officials came to her classes and told women they were no longer allowed to attend school alongside men. She was transferred to a Taliban-run school, where women were only allowed to study dentistry. Ultimately, women were banned from higher education.
For Amir, work evaporated when the Taliban prohibited most forms of music, which they said was against the teachings of Islam. In 2023, authorities announced that religious police would scour wedding halls in Kabul to enforce the ban. In 2024, they announced they had 鈥渟eized and destroyed鈥 over 21,000 instruments.
鈥淭he Taliban told me I had to quit my job a number of times. But if I gave it up, I would have lost everything 鈥 my work, my livelihood, my entire way of life,鈥 Amir said.
Under the new government, some of Afghanistan鈥檚 millions of Hazaras have been killed in raids and attacks as part of a campaign of violence and discrimination. Suraiya became increasingly scared to go outside. The home she shared with her parents and five siblings felt more like a prison.
鈥淲e were considered nothing just because we were Hazaras,鈥 she said.
The Hussainis felt they had no choice but to leave.
The Taliban government did not respond to a request for comment about criticisms of human rights concerns about their treatment of Hazaras and women under its rule. Crossing continents
To finance their journey to the US, the three siblings sold everything they owned in 2023, including a family home.
Along with Bano and her husband, the siblings traveled to neighboring Iran, where they spent a year applying for a humanitarian visa to Brazil. While they waited, Bano gave birth to her first daughter.
In Iran, the family and the baby lived in a ramshackle home in Tehran, eluding detection to avoid being swept up in deportations by Iran鈥檚 government. In spring of 2024, their spirits lifted when they boarded a flight to Brazil with new humanitarian visas. A world of possibilities seemed to await.
The airport in Sao Paolo is the starting point for many migrants traveling to reach the US In a span of months, the Hussaini family crossed 11 countries, winding their way north by bus through the high-altitude deserts of Bolivia and the dense forests of the Andes.
Suraiya carried a hair clip her mother had given her and a few totems from friends. Then, in Ecuador, those small pieces of her former life were stolen.
The siblings joined more than a million people who crossed the Darien Gap between 2022 and 2024. Controlled by criminal gangs, the perilous stretch of jungle dividing Colombia and Panama has turned into a migratory highway for those fleeing economic crisis, repression and war.
Suraiya remembers the pouring rain and the crying of her sister鈥檚 baby as they trudged through the rainforest. By the time they climbed out of the jungle days later, their shoes were in tatters.
Only able to speak their native Dari, they did their best to learn small words like 鈥渁migo鈥 and basic questions to communicate.
One night, she heard that three people, including a 6-year-old child, had drowned in the river next to where they were sleeping.
For the first time, she wondered if they had made a mistake.
鈥淣othing was as difficult as the jungle. 鈥 I had never seen anything like it,鈥 she said. 鈥淭here was this feeling of regret, but there was no way to go back.鈥 Asylum contracting globally
As they were traveling, access to asylum was constricting globally. In September, the United Nations refugee agency warned that governments around the world, namely the US and European countries, were increasingly undermining the global convention on refugees and asylum-seekers.
鈥淭he institution of the asylum worldwide is under more threat now than it has ever been,鈥 Ruvendrini Menikdiwela, assistant high commissioner for protection at the agency, told reporters.
Experts describe the shift as 鈥減rotection fatigue鈥 triggered by rising rates of displacement around the world.
By the end of 2024, 123.2 million people worldwide 鈥 approximately 1 in 67 people 鈥 were living forcibly displaced from their homes, according to the UN
鈥淕overnments have gotten much less tolerant of asylum,鈥 said Susan Fratzke, a senior policy analyst at Migration Policy Institute. 鈥淩ather than trying to solve these problems within their asylum systems, they鈥檙e increasingly turning to measures that really push the boundaries of what鈥檚 legal.鈥
Democratic President Joe Biden鈥檚 administration had already been cutting access to asylum and trying to slow the flow of migrants before the 2024 election. Under Republican Trump, access to asylum along the U.S-Mexico border has virtually disappeared.
Children and other Afghans wait in line outside of a tent in an Afghan refugee camp on November 4, 2021 in Holloman Air Force Base, New Mexico. (AFP)
Governments from Europe to Australia to Asia have heightened restrictions and even imposed laws criminalizing asylum-seekers.
Nigel Farage, the head of the United Kingdom鈥檚 far-right party, promised to carry out mass deportations if it wins elections next year, regardless of the dangers that asylum-seekers may face back home.
鈥淲e cannot be responsible for all the sins that take place around the world.鈥 Farage said. 鈥楴o other country will take you鈥
Amir, Suraiya, Bano and her husband and daughter arrived in Mexico in the fall of 2024. Like many asylum-seekers, they spent nearly half a year in limbo waiting for the chance to make their case to American authorities.
They would wake up and immediately apply for an appointment on a Biden-era app, known as CBP One, a daily lottery under which more than 900,000 people entered the US without a visa for up to two years, with eligibility for a work permit and a shot at getting asylum through immigration courts. It was a game of chance and patience more than circumstance.
To pay for a small room they shared with other migrants, they cleaned the streets of Mexico City for coins. They went to bed each night unsure of their fate.
In January, they received word that their names were selected. As they made their way to the Tijuana-San Diego border, their once-vague ambitions gave way to imaginings of returning to college, finding work and building a life in the US
But the date of their appointment was Jan. 24, four days after Trump took office. Their plan to seek asylum disappeared when his new administration shut down the app and canceled all appointments, stranding tens of thousands of people like the Hussainis in Mexico.
Desperate, the family decided to cross the border illegally and present themselves to authorities as refugees in early February. American and international law allows vulnerable populations to seek asylum regardless of whether they enter legally, but under Trump that has virtually disappeared.
The family crossed a muddy Alamar River running along the border. Reeking of sewage, they were detained by Border Patrol agents who brought them to a detention center near San Diego that was wedged between farms along the border fence.
The few belongings 鈥 phones, passports and a small packet of medicine 鈥 they had left were seized and the family was torn apart.
Locked in the concrete facility for more than a week and wearing the same grimy clothes, the siblings begged authorities to see each other or to call family in Afghanistan and in the US for help.
It was all in vain. They were not told where they were going and were not permitted to present their asylum case.
鈥淵ou have no options,鈥 Suraiya remembers being told by US Customs and Border Protection officers. 鈥淏ecause you have been in prison here in the US, no other country will take you.鈥
Within weeks, the Hussaini siblings were loaded onto three separate planes that would scatter them overseas, setting each on very different paths.
Department of Homeland Security spokesperson Tricia McLaughlin said their case was a 鈥渟ob story鈥 and that reporting on their separation was 鈥減ure garbage.鈥 She did not answer multiple questions inquiring why the siblings were separated and sent to other countries. She said those seeking humanitarian protection should ask at official border crossings, not enter illegally, even as that path has become largely impossible under Trump.
鈥淭hese are grown adults who made a choice to try and enter our country illegally,鈥 she said. A family torn apart
Amir felt utterly alone.
It was March. He had spent two sleepless days and nights aboard commercial airlines with no hint where he was headed.
His plane stopped in Dubai, where he stepped out into the white halls and flashing lights of the airport. Armed guards met him, soon confirming his suspicion that he would be returned to Afghanistan.
He sobbed for hours in a cell at the airport and begged guards not to send him back. He went to the restroom and tore up documents confirming his asylum appointment and deportation papers, anything that could provide evidence to the Taliban that he had sought asylum in the US
Shortly after, he said he was forced aboard a plane to Kabul.
鈥淎t first there were two soldiers, then there were four. I kept refusing to board and they dragged me onto the plane while I cried,鈥 he said.
The stories of people like the Hussainis are mostly lost in the headlines about US Immigration and Customs Enforcement raids and deportations, which have only accelerated.
ICE averaged 710 arrests a day during Trump鈥檚 first six months in office, up from 311 a day during the final budget year under Biden, according to agency data obtained by Deportation Data Project, based at University of California, Berkeley and analyzed by The Associated Press.
Dozens of people participate in an anti-Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) rally outside of the Brooklyn Metropolitan Detention Center on September 02, 2025, in New York City. (AFP)
Less visible is the human toll of the policies and what is in store for those denied asylum when they return home.
Migrants are often dropped back into the circumstances that forced them to flee, and they also often face a combination of economic deprivation, physical danger and social exile.
In Afghanistan, with no political opposition, the Taliban wield unchecked power and have targeted everything from civil society to musicians, while extremist groups attack Hazara minorities.
The UN has urged member nations not to deport anyone, even those who have been denied asylum, to Afghanistan.
In a July report, the UN warned that people being returned to Afghanistan increasingly face 鈥渢hreats, arbitrary arrest, detention, torture and ill-treatment鈥 only exacerbated by closing pathways out of the country. As a result, they are forced into hiding.
Despite that, ICE arrests of Afghans in the US have jumped along with that of people of other nationalities since Trump took office, compared with arrests during the final year of the Biden administration. Living in the shadows in Afghanistan
Back in Afghanistan鈥檚 capital of 5 million people, fear follows Amir like a shadow.
When he returned, he walked through the Kabul airport with his eyes cast downward, terrified he would be targeted.
鈥淭he dangers I face are these: If I am arrested, I will be questioned about why I left the country. Secondly, I might be accused of being a spy because I came back from America,鈥 he said. 鈥淪imply fleeing the country is itself considered a threat.鈥
Every night, he tries to sleep in a new place, often with friends or extended family, though many of them have cast him away, worried they could become targets.
鈥淢ost nights I am alone. I try not to communicate with many people,鈥 he said.
After he had his phone searched at a police checkpoint, Amir began to delete messages and contacts in his phone. He wants to work, but worries that returning to the same place every day could draw attention. That鈥檚 only been exacerbated by soaring unemployment and instability fueled by mass-expulsions of Afghans from nearby countries.
His money gone, Amir has been left to ask friends for assistance.
He awakens each day to shrinking options. Sleep eludes him, fear grips him, hunger torments him. He tries to not let hopelessness overwhelm him.
鈥淚鈥檝e lost everything.鈥 he said. 鈥淵ou lose hope in life.鈥 Dropped in a legal 鈥榖lack hole鈥 in Central America
Amir鈥檚 sisters tried to track him down and search for help, writing aid groups and anyone they could for help or more details on his whereabouts. That was when Suraiya first messaged The Associated Press, and when months of correspondence with journalists began. AP later spoke to Suraiya from a migrant refuge in Panama, with Amir over the phone as he hid away in Kabul, and maintained contact with them in their native Dari since.
The sisters struggled to aid their brother as they struggled in their own world of precarity.
In early February, his sisters were awakened by officials in the morning in their cells in the California detention center and loaded onto separate flights to Central America.
Bano, her husband and 1-year-old daughter were sent to Costa Rica. Suraiya was sent alone to Panama, part of a larger deal struck with the US government.
They were sent with 400 other people fleeing war and repression in Afghanistan, Iran, Russia, China and Sudan, and were among the first to be deported from the US and dropped in third countries. Others have been sent to El Salvador, South Sudan, Eswatini and Mexico.
Human rights groups have argued that those deportees have been dropped into a legal 鈥渂lack hole,鈥 part of a punitive strategy by the administration to dissuade others from attempting the journey north. Panama鈥檚 then-vice foreign minister told the AP that the government was detaining deportees such as Suraiya to help the Trump administration 鈥渟end a signal of deterrence.鈥
In October, the chief of the UN鈥檚 refugee agency suggested that Trump鈥檚 deportations practices were breaking international law.
Without speaking Spanish or English or having the money to pay for a lawyer, people deported to third countries often lack basic legal protections and have few ways out.
The increasing use of such deportations have fueled concern that the governments are creating a roving population of migrants with few safeguards.
In a September AP-NORC poll, three in four of those polled said the US opening its doors to refugees fleeing violence in their own countries should be a high or moderate priority, marking a slight warming by Americans toward refugee populations since just before Trump took office. Nearly half of Americans maintain that Trump鈥檚 deportation efforts have gone too far, an opinion split along partisan lines. 鈥榃e cannot stay here鈥
Suraiya stepped out of the military plane into thick tropical air feeling disoriented. She tried to figure out where she was. Then she saw guards with uniforms that said 鈥淧anama,鈥 the same place she had passed through months before.
She and some 200 migrants were locked into hotel rooms in the country鈥檚 capital. While some deportees held up signs reading 鈥渉elp,鈥 Suraiya peered down at the city from her window, held a hand up to her head and cried.
鈥淚t was a feeling of hopelessness and heartbreak, like being beaten down,鈥 she said. 鈥淎fter all the hardships, after the long journey and the struggles of the jungle, they brought us back.鈥
One late February night, she said Panamanian officials took them from their beds and drove them to a remote camp in the Darien Gap, where their phones were seized.
In jungle heat, guards threatened to send them back to their home countries, and fed the detainees rotten food, Suraiya, other detainees and human rights groups said. Officials refused to provide an increasing number of sick people medicine unless they paid, detainees said.
Facing international criticism, Panamanian authorities dropped Suraiya and others on the streets of Panama City. Human rights groups later offered them shelter in a former school.
It was there, in the small brick gymnasium, that she heard from her siblings for the first time in weeks.
In Costa Rica, Bano and her family were bused with hundreds of others to a former factory that was turned into a migrant detention facility along the Panama border.
The hundreds of migrants, including 81 children, were barred from leaving the facility for months. That led to a lawsuit by a human rights group arguing that the government had subjected the kids to 鈥渋nhumane treatment.鈥
Later released and given temporary protections in Costa Rica, Bano and her family have spent the past months applying for asylum in Canada and Switzerland. She said the countries refused.
鈥淚n Costa Rica, we have no one from our country, no friends, no family, and no money,鈥 Bano said. 鈥淲e cannot stay here.鈥
What weighs on Suraiya most, though, is her brother.
She spends her days glued to her phone in a sparsely furnished room she shares with other Afghan deportees, checking on Amir and writing to human rights organizations. A small fan cuts through the afternoon heat.
鈥淔rom afar, I can鈥檛 help my brother at all,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 saw with my own eyes everything he went through on our journey. I knew his goals, his dreams. But when he was deported to Afghanistan, I knew that was all gone.鈥
Finding refuge in one country willing to open its doors
In September, Suraiya finally found some relief as she boarded a plane out of the Panama City airport.
After months of humanitarian groups searching and herself going door to door to foreign consulates with other Afghans in a push to find any place that would accept them, Chile agreed to open its doors.
As she looked out on the Andean mountains towering over the Chilean capital, Santiago, and wandered the streets of her new city, she allowed herself to wonder what her new life would look like.
Perhaps she would return to school. She thought first of getting Amir out of Afghanistan, then of her sister stranded in Costa Rica, then her younger sisters whose studies had been cut off just like hers. She thought of the future she could finally build.
When she arrived at her new home and called her parents, the first thing she said was, 鈥淎ll I want is for you to come so we can build a life together.鈥