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ICE detains Marine Corps veteran’s wife who was still breastfeeding their child

ICE detains Marine Corps veteran’s wife who was still breastfeeding their child
The husband says Paola Clouatre accompanied her mother illegally into the country from Mexico more than a decade ago. (AP)
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Updated 23 June 2025

ICE detains Marine Corps veteran’s wife who was still breastfeeding their child

ICE detains Marine Corps veteran’s wife who was still breastfeeding their child
  • The husband says Paola Clouatre accompanied her mother illegally into the country from Mexico more than a decade ago
  • Trump administration pushes for immigration officers to arrest 3,000 people a day

BATON ROUGE: Marine Corps veteran Adrian Clouatre doesn’t know how to tell his children where their mother went after US Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers detained her last month.
When his nearly 2-year-old son Noah asks for his mother before bed, Clouatre just tells him, “Mama will be back soon.” When his 3-month-old, breastfeeding daughter Lyn is hungry, he gives her a bottle of baby formula instead. He’s worried how his newborn will bond with her mother absent skin-to-skin contact.
His wife, Paola, is one of tens of thousands of people in custody and facing deportation as the Trump administration pushes for immigration officers to arrest 3,000 people a day.
Even as Marine Corps recruiters promote enlistment as protection for families lacking legal status, directives for strict immigrant enforcement have cast away practices of deference previously afforded to military families, immigration law experts say. The federal agency tasked with helping military family members gain legal status now refers them for deportation, government memos show.
To visit his wife, Adrian Clouatre has to make an eight-hour round trip from their home in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, to a rural ICE detention center in Monroe. Clouatre, who qualifies as a service-disabled veteran, goes every chance he can get.
Paola Clouatre, a 25-year-old Mexican national whose mother brought her into the country illegally more than a decade ago, met Adrian Clouatre, 26, at a southern California nightclub during the final months of his five years of military service in 2022. Within a year, they had tattooed each other’s names on their arms.
After they married in 2024, Paola Clouatre sought a green card to legally live and work in the US Adrian Clouatre said he is “not a very political person” but believes his wife deserved to live legally in the US
“I’m all for ‘get the criminals out of the country,’ right?” he said. “But the people that are here working hard, especially the ones married to Americans — I mean, that’s always been a way to secure a green card.”
Detained at a green card meeting
The process to apply for Paola Clouatre’s green card went smoothly at first, but eventually she learned ICE had issued an order for her deportation in 2018 after her mother failed to appear at an immigration hearing.
Clouatre and her mother had been estranged for years — Clouatre cycled out of homeless shelters as a teenager — and up until a couple of months ago, Clouatre had “no idea” about her mother’s missed hearing or the deportation order, her husband said.
Adrian Clouatre recalled that a US Citizenship and Immigration Services staffer asked about the deportation order during a May 27 appointment as part of her green card application. After Paola Clouatre explained that she was trying to reopen her case, the staffer asked her and her husband to wait in the lobby for paperwork regarding a follow-up appointment, which her husband said he believed was a “ploy.”
Soon, officers arrived and handcuffed Paola Clouatre, who handed her wedding ring to her husband for safekeeping.
Adrian Clouatre, eyes welling with tears, said he and his wife had tried to “do the right thing” and that he felt ICE officers should have more discretion over arrests, though he understood they were trying to do their jobs.
“It’s just a hell of a way to treat a veteran,” said Carey Holliday, a former immigration judge who is now representing the couple. “You take their wives and send them back to Mexico?”
The Clouatres filed a motion for a California-based immigration judge to reopen the case on Paola’s deportation order and are waiting to hear back, Holliday said.
Less discretion for military families
Department of Homeland Security spokesperson Tricia McLaughlin said in an emailed statement that Paola Clouatre “is in the country illegally” and that the administration is “not going to ignore the rule of law.”
“Ignoring an Immigration Judge’s order to leave the US is a bad idea,” US Citizenship and Immigration Services said in a June 9 post on X which appeared to refer to Clouatre’s case. The agency added that the government “has a long memory and no tolerance for defiance when it comes to making America safe again.”
Prior to the Trump administration’s push to drive up deportations, USCIS provided much more discretion for veterans seeking legal status for a family member, said Holliday and Margaret Stock, a military immigration law expert.
In a Feb. 28 memo, the agency said it “will no longer exempt” from deportation people in groups that had received more grace in the past. This includes the families of military personnel or veterans, Stock said. As of June 12, the agency said it has referred upward of 26,000 cases to ICE for deportation.
USCIS still offers a program allowing family members of military personnel who illegally entered the US to remain in the country as they apply for a green card. But there no longer appears to be room for leeway, such as giving a veteran’s spouse like Paola Clouatre the opportunity to halt her active deportation order without facing arrest, Stock said.
But numerous Marine Corps recruiters have continued to post ads on social media, geared toward Latinos, promoting enlistment as a way to gain “protection from deportation” for family members.
“I think it’s bad for them to be advertising that people are going to get immigration benefits when it appears that the administration is no longer offering these immigration benefits,” Stock said. “It sends the wrong message to the recruits.”
Marine Corps spokesperson Master Sgt. Tyler Hlavac told The Associated Press that recruiters have now been informed they are “not the proper authority” to “imply that the Marine Corps can secure immigration relief for applicants or their families.”


Russia will destroy Tomahawk missiles and their launchers if US gives them to Ukraine, senior lawmaker says

Updated 8 sec ago

Russia will destroy Tomahawk missiles and their launchers if US gives them to Ukraine, senior lawmaker says

Russia will destroy Tomahawk missiles and their launchers if US gives them to Ukraine, senior lawmaker says
“Our response will be tough, ambiguous, measured, and asymmetrical,” Kartapolov said
Kartapolov said he did not think Tomahawks would change anything on the battlefield

MOSCOW: Russia will shoot down Tomahawk cruise missiles and bomb their launch sites if the United States decides to supply them to Ukraine and find a way to retaliate against Washington that hurts, a senior Russian lawmaker said on Wednesday.
US President Donald Trump said on Monday he would want to know what Ukraine planned to do with Tomahawks before agreeing to provide them because he did not want to escalate the war between Russia and Ukraine. He said, however, that he had “sort of made a decision” on the matter.
“Our response will be tough, ambiguous, measured, and asymmetrical. We will find ways to hurt those who cause us trouble,” Andrei Kartapolov, head of the Russian parliament’s defense committee, told the state RIA news agency.
Kartapolov, a former deputy defense minister, said he did not think Tomahawks would change anything on the battlefield even if they were supplied to Ukraine as he said they could only be given in small numbers — in tens rather than hundreds.
“We know these missiles very well, how they fly, how to shoot them down; we worked with them in Syria, so there is nothing new. The only problems will be for those who supply them and those who use them; that’s where the problems will be,” he said.
Kartapolov was also cited as saying that Moscow had so far seen no signs that Ukraine was preparing launch sites for Tomahawks, something he said Kyiv would not be able to hide if it got such missiles. If and when that happened, he said Russia would use drones and missiles to destroy any launchers.
Separately, Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov
urged Washington
to assess the situation around the potential supply of Tomahawks “soberly.” He said any such decision would be a serious escalatory step that would bring about a “qualitative” change in the situation.

Philippines’ Cebu records more than 9,000 aftershocks following powerful earthquake

Philippines’ Cebu records more than 9,000 aftershocks following powerful earthquake
Updated 58 min 50 sec ago

Philippines’ Cebu records more than 9,000 aftershocks following powerful earthquake

Philippines’ Cebu records more than 9,000 aftershocks following powerful earthquake
  • 72 people killed, nearly 300 injured in magnitude 6.9 quake that hit region last week
  • Aftershocks still pose danger and can damage more structures, PHIVOLCS warns

MANILA: More than 9,000 aftershocks have rattled Cebu since a deadly earthquake last week, the Philippine Institute of Volcanology and Seismology said on Wednesday.

At least 72 people were killed and 500 injured on Sept. 30, when the central Philippine province was jolted by the magnitude 6.9 quake — the most powerful to strike the region in more than a decade.

The quake’s epicenter was in Bogo City and most of the casualties were in its neighborhood, but strong tremors and damage were also recorded in the provincial capital, Cebu City, some 100 km away.

“As of 6 a.m., we have recorded 9,037. The strongest so far is the October 3 aftershock, which was magnitude 5.1,” PHIVOLCS director Dr. Teresito Bacolcol told the local Dobol B TV.

In an afternoon update, PHIVOLCS said that the number of aftershocks had increased to 9,308.

“The strong aftershocks can further damage the structures previously affected by the main shock, can trigger landslides, especially in mountainous areas where tension cracks are already visible,” Charmaine V. Villamil, geologist and senior researcher at PHIVOLCS, told Arab News.

“They can cause more sinkholes, can further cause coastal subsidence and lateral spreading — liquefaction.”

Liquefaction is a process after earthquakes that makes solid soil behave like a liquid — often leading to severe damage — buildings or roads may sink or collapse even if they were not directly damaged by shaking.

The National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council estimated that, as of Wednesday, more than 62,500 houses had been damaged by the quake and subsequent tremors.

The earthquake was the most powerful to strike the central region of the Philippines in more than a decade.

The whole Cebu province, home to 3.5 million people, was placed under a state of calamity following the earthquake, which came just weeks after the region was hit by two typhoons in a row.

Even though Cebu is outside the usual typhoon path in the country, it still faces strong storms and is prone to earthquakes because it is part of the Pacific Ring of Fire.

In 2013, at least 215 people were killed when a magnitude 7.2 earthquake hit Cebu and the neighboring island province of Bohol.


Mamdani accuses Netanyahu of ‘genocidal war’

Mamdani accuses Netanyahu of ‘genocidal war’
Updated 08 October 2025

Mamdani accuses Netanyahu of ‘genocidal war’

Mamdani accuses Netanyahu of ‘genocidal war’
  • NYC mayoral candidate attends vigil marking Oct. 7 anniversary hosted by Israelis for Peace
  • ‘Every day in Gaza has become a place where grief itself has run out of language’

LONDON: New York City mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani on Tuesday denounced Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu for waging a “genocidal war” in Gaza, and called for a ceasefire in the besieged Palestinian enclave.

The Democratic nominee later attended a vigil in Manhattan marking the two-year anniversary of the Oct. 7 Hamas attack on Israel, The Guardian reported.

The event was hosted by Israelis for Peace, an anti-occupation group who have convened weekly demonstrations since 2023 to call for a ceasefire and the release of Israeli hostages.

Mamdani’s statement said: “Two years ago today, Hamas carried out a horrific war crime, killing more than 1,100 Israelis and kidnapping 250 more.

“I mourn these lives and pray for the safe return of every hostage still held and for every family whose lives were torn apart by these atrocities.”

He highlighted a death toll in Gaza “that now far exceeds 67,000; with the Israeli military bombing homes, hospitals and schools into rubble.”

Mamdani added: “Every day in Gaza has become a place where grief itself has run out of language. I mourn these lives and pray for the families that have been shattered.”

The last two years of war has “demonstrated the very worst of humanity,” he said, calling for an end to Israeli “occupation and apartheid.”


UK police arrest second man over mosque attack

UK police arrest second man over mosque attack
Updated 08 October 2025

UK police arrest second man over mosque attack

UK police arrest second man over mosque attack
  • Images show balaclava-clad duo spraying accelerant on entrance then setting it alight
  • Both men arrested on suspicion of arson with intent to endanger life

LONDON: British police have arrested a second man in connection with an alleged arson attack on a mosque, The Independent reported on Wednesday.

Emergency services were called to the mosque in the town of Peacehaven, East Sussex, on Saturday evening.

Police released images showing two people in balaclavas spraying suspected accelerant on the entrance, which was then set alight.

Police arrested a 46-year-old man on Monday, while the second suspect, a 25-year-old man of no fixed address, was apprehended a day later, Sussex Police said.

Superintendent Rachel Swinney added: “We continue to work with our local religious communities to support them and ensure their concerns are heard and acted upon.

“Sussex Police takes a zero-tolerance approach to hate crime and there is no place for hate across the county.”

Both men were arrested on suspicion of arson with intent to endanger life. The first suspect was released on conditional bail while the second remains in police custody.

Mark Cullimore, chief inspector, said: “We believe there are people in the community who know who is responsible for this appalling and reckless attack and we are urging anyone with information which could be vital to our investigation to come forward. Please contact us or ring 101, quoting Operation Spey.”

 


Germany to allow police to shoot down drones

Germany to allow police to shoot down drones
Updated 08 October 2025

Germany to allow police to shoot down drones

Germany to allow police to shoot down drones
  • Rogue drones have disrupted European aviation in recent weeks
  • Some leaders have attributed them to hybrid war waged by Russia

BERLIN: Germany will grant police the power to shoot down rogue drones like those that have disrupted airports across Europe and that some European leaders have attributed to a hybrid war being waged by Russia.
The new law, agreed by the cabinet on Wednesday and awaiting parliamentary approval, explicitly authorizes the police to down drones violating Germany’s airspace, including shooting them down in cases of acute threat or serious harm.
Other techniques available to down drones include using lasers or jamming signals to sever control and navigation links. The new law comes after dozens of flights were diverted or canceled last Friday at Munich Airport, Germany’s second largest, leaving more than 10,000 passengers stranded, after rogue drone sightings. German Chancellor Friedrich Merz has said he assumed Russia was behind many of the drones flying over Germany last weekend, but none had been armed and were rather on reconnaissance flights. EU leaders have come to view Russia as a major threat to their continent’s security following Moscow’s 2022 full-scale invasion of Ukraine and their support of Kyiv. European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen called last month for what she described as a drone wall – a network of sensors and weapons to detect, track and neutralize intruding unmanned aircraft – to protect Europe’s eastern flank.
But some say the drones involved in recent incidents could also have been launched from within the EU. With the new law, Germany joins European countries that have recently given security forces powers to down drones violating their airspace, including Britain, France, Lithuania and Romania.
It states that to avert dangers posed by drones on the land, in the air or on water, police “may employ appropriate technical means against the system, its control unit, or its control link, if averting the danger by other measures would be futile or significantly impeded.”
Germany recorded 172 drone-related disruptions to air traffic between January and the end of September 2025, up from 129 in the same period last year and 121 in 2023, according to data from Deutsche Flugsicherung (DFS).
German military drills last month in the northern port city of Hamburg included a demonstration of how to neutralize a rogue drone.
Like a spider, a large military drone shot a net at a smaller one in mid-flight, entangling its propellers and forcing it to the ground, where a robotic dog trotted over to seek possible explosives.
Shooting down drones could be unsafe in densely populated urban areas, however, and airports do not necessarily have detection systems that can immediately report sightings.