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Trump administration releases people to shelters it threatened to prosecute for aiding migrants

Trump administration releases people to shelters it threatened to prosecute for aiding migrants
The Trump administration has continued releasing people charged with being in the country illegally to nongovernmental shelters along the US-Mexico border. (AFP/File)
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Updated 24 May 2025

Trump administration releases people to shelters it threatened to prosecute for aiding migrants

Trump administration releases people to shelters it threatened to prosecute for aiding migrants
  • Border shelters were rattled by a letter from FEMA that raised “significant concerns” about potentially illegal activity
  • FEMA suggested shelters may have committed felony offenses against bringing people across the border illegally or transporting them within the US

TEXAS, USA: The Trump administration has continued releasing people charged with being in the country illegally to nongovernmental shelters along the US-Mexico border after telling those organizations that providing migrants with temporary housing and other aid may violate a law used to prosecute smugglers.

Border shelters, which have long provided lodging, meals and transportation to the nearest bus station or airport, were rattled by a letter from the Federal Emergency Management Agency that raised “significant concerns” about potentially illegal activity and demanded detailed information in a wide-ranging investigation.

FEMA suggested shelters may have committed felony offenses against bringing people across the border illegally or transporting them within the United States.

“It was pretty scary. I’m not going to lie,” said Rebecca Solloa, executive director of Catholic Charities Diocese of Laredo.

US Immigration and Customs Enforcement continued to ask shelters in Texas and Arizona to house people even after the March 11 letter, putting them in the awkward position of doing something that FEMA appeared to say might be illegal. Both agencies are part of the Department of Homeland Security.

After receiving the letter, Catholic Charities received eight to 10 people a day from ICE until financial losses forced it to close its shelter in the Texas border city on April 25, Solloa said.

The Holding Institute Community, also in Laredo, has been taking about 20 families a week from ICE’s family detention centers in Dilley and Karnes City, Texas, Executive Director Michael Smith said. They come from Russia, Turkiye, Iran, Iraq, Papua New Guinea and China.

Annunciation House in El Paso, Texas, has been receiving five to 10 people day from ICE, including from Honduras and Venezuela, said Ruben Garcia, its executive director.

International Rescue Committee didn’t get a letter but continues receiving people from ICE in Phoenix, according to a person briefed on the matter who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss information that has not been made public. The releases include people who had been held at ICE’s Krome Detention Center in Miami, the site of severe overcrowding.

Working around conflicting issues

ICE’s requests struck Solloa as a “little bit of a contradiction,” but Catholic Charities agreed. She said some guests had been in ICE detention centers two to four weeks after getting arrested in the nation’s interior and ordered released by an immigration judge while their challenges to deportations wound through the courts. Others had been flown from San Diego after crossing the border illegally.

Those released were from India, China, Pakistan, TĂŒrkiye, and Central and South America, Solloa said.

Smith, a Methodist pastor, said that the FEMA letter was alarming and that agreeing to continue caring for people released by ICE was “probably not a good idea.” Still, it was an easy choice.

“There’s some things that are just right to do,” he said.

Tricia McLaughlin, spokeswoman for the Homeland Security Department, drew a distinction with large-scale releases under Trump’s predecessor, Joe Biden. The Biden administration worked closely with shelters but, during its busiest times, released migrants at bus stops or other public locations.

“Under the Biden administration, when ICE has aliens in its custody who are ordered released, ICE does not simply release them onto the streets of a community — ICE works to verify a sponsor for the illegal alien, typically family members or friends but occasionally a non-governmental-organization,” McLaughlin said.

The government has struggled to quickly deport people from some countries because of diplomatic, financial and logistic challenges. Those hurdles have prompted ICE to deport people to countries other than their own, including El Salvador, Costa Rica, Panama and — this week — South Sudan. If those options aren’t available, ICE may be forced to release people in the United States.

People can challenge deportations in immigration court, though their options are much more limited when stopped at the border. If a judge orders their release, ICE is generally left with no choice but to release them.

Families pose another challenge. ICE is generally prohibited from holding families with children under 18 for more than 20 days under a long-standing court agreement that the Trump administration said Thursday it would try to end.

The Trump administration has boasted that it virtually ended the practice of releasing people who cross the border illegally with notices to appear in immigration court. The Border Patrol released only seven people from February through April, down from 130,368 the same period a year earlier under President Joe Biden. But those figures do not include ICE, whose data is not publicly available

Close ties between shelters and federal authorities

FEMA awarded $641 million to dozens of state and local governments and organizations across the country in the 2024 fiscal year to help them deal with large numbers of migrants who crossed the border from Mexico.

FEMA has suspended payments during its review, which required shelters to provide “a detailed and descriptive list of specific services provided.” Executive officers must sign sworn statements that they have no knowledge or suspicions of anyone in their organizations violating the smuggling law.

The releases show how border shelters have often maintained close, if cordial, relations with federal immigration authorities at the ground level, even when senior officials publicly criticize them.

“We have a good working relationship with our federal partners. We always have,” Solloa said. “They asked us to help, then we will continue to help, but at some point we have to say, ‘Yikes I don’t have any more money for this. Our agency is hurting and I’m sorry, we can’t do this anymore.’”

Catholic Charities hosted at least 120,000 people at its Laredo shelter since opening in 2021 and housed 600 to 700 people on its busiest nights in 2023, Solloa said. It was counting on up to $7 million from FEMA. The shelter closed with loss of nearly $1 million, after not receiving any FEMA money.

Holding Institute, part of United Women in Faith, has cut paid staff and volunteers to seven from 45 amid the absence of federal funding, Smith said. To save money, it delivers most meals without protein. Language differences have been challenging.

The International Rescue Committee said in a statement that it intends to continue providing support services to released people in Phoenix.

“As the scale and scope of these needs evolve, the IRC remains committed to ensuring individuals have access to essential humanitarian services, including food, water, hygiene supplies and information,” it said.


Security tightened in India’s Ladakh after deadly protests

Security tightened in India’s Ladakh after deadly protests
Updated 59 min 35 sec ago

Security tightened in India’s Ladakh after deadly protests

Security tightened in India’s Ladakh after deadly protests
  • At least 4 people reported dead, dozens injured after police open fire on protesters
  • Clashes erupt during hunger strike demanding Ladakh’s autonomy, land protections

NEW DELHI: Indian authorities imposed security restrictions in Ladakh on Thursday, following deadly clashes between police and protesters demanding greater autonomy for the Himalayan region which borders China.

Protests turned violent on Wednesday after demonstrators threw stones at officers trying to disperse them in Leh, Ladakh’s main city, where they torched the regional office of India’s ruling Bharatiya Janata Party.

The Ministry of Home Affairs confirmed in a statement that the police had fired on the protesters — whom they referred to as a “mob” — and “unfortunately some casualties are reported.”

It said that more than 30 police personnel had been injured, while twice as many protesters were reported by protest organizers to have been wounded.

Following the incidents, restrictions were imposed in Ladakh’s main districts, Leh and Kargil, with markets closed and police and paramilitary troops patrolling the streets.

“The situation is under control, but it is still tense. In Leh there is a curfew in some parts. In Kargil, they have imposed Section 144 — a ban on the assembly of more than four people,” said Sajjad Kargili, member of the Kargil Democratic Alliance and the Leh Apex Body, the political advocacy groups central to the region’s negotiations with the Indian government.

Ladakh is part of greater Kashmiri territory, which has for decades been disputed by India, Pakistan and China.

Ladakh’s Muslim-majority Kargil district was the site of military conflict between India and Pakistan in 1999, while the Buddhist-majority Leh district is where India’s deadly border clashes with China in 2020 led to the freezing of relations for five years.

The region belonged to the Indian-controlled semi-autonomous Jammu and Kashmir state until 2019, when Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government abolished its statehood and put it under the direct administration of New Delhi.

More than 90 percent of the 230,000 population is listed by the Indian government as Scheduled Tribes — a category which includes tribal and Indigenous communities entitled to land protections.

The local community has been peacefully protesting over the past six years. Led by climate activist Sonam Wangchuk, it has been seeking special status for Ladakh to allow the setting up of elected local bodies to have autonomy over the region’s land and agriculture.

“For the last six years, there have been no jobs, no democracy. The government made promises about implementing the Sixth Schedule of the Constitution that provides greater administrative autonomy and self-governance of tribal areas 
 Even the BJP has promised that,” Kargili told Arab News.

“We don’t have any public service commission. The youth don’t have any jobs. This is the reason for the frustration. People are very upset and frustrated because no one is listening.”

Protesters in Leh city have been on hunger strike for the past 15 days. While a round of talks with the government was scheduled for Oct. 6, Wednesday’s clashes erupted when two elderly strikers collapsed and had to be hospitalized.

“Four youths died in the clash,” Rigzin Wangmo, a Ladakh-based journalist who was at the site, told Arab News.

“We have never seen anything like this before. It was just a normal protest and a peaceful protest followed by a rally. Suddenly, the crowd was not in control, and nobody expected that, not even the police.”


Portugal’s Azores brace for Hurricane Gabrielle

Portugal’s Azores brace for Hurricane Gabrielle
Updated 57 min 33 sec ago

Portugal’s Azores brace for Hurricane Gabrielle

Portugal’s Azores brace for Hurricane Gabrielle
  • “The archipelago will feel the first effects from late Thursday afternoon,” the Portuguese meteorological office said
  • On Thursday night, the eye of the storm will barrel through the Azores’ two western islands and then its five central islands, which are on red alert

SANTA CRUZ DAS FLORES, Portugal: Hurricane Gabrielle is forecast to batter the Portuguese Azores archipelago on Thursday with winds of 200 kilometers (124 miles) per hour and waves higher than 10 meters (33 feet).
“The archipelago will feel the first effects from late Thursday afternoon,” the Portuguese meteorological office (IPMA) said in its latest update on the popular tourist destination.
Gabrielle, which was still classified as a Category 3 hurricane on Wednesday evening, is expected to lose momentum and reach the Azores from the west as a Category 1 hurricane, the IPMA said.
Later becoming a “post-tropical depression,” Gabrielle will make landfall in mainland Portugal on Saturday.
On Thursday night, the eye of the storm will barrel through the Azores’ two western islands and then its five central islands, which are on red alert.
The regional government has ordered schools and public buildings on the seven islands of the Western and Central Groups to close for 24 hours from 6:00 p.m. local time (1600 GMT).
The Eastern Group, comprising the two remaining islands in the archipelago and a cluster of islets, have not received similar orders.
Winds could attain 150 kph in the western islands of Flores and Corvo before strengthening to up to 200 kph in the central islands of Faial, Pico, Sao Jorge, Terceira and Graciosa.
The ocean is expected to be rough with swells of eight to 10 meters. Waves could reach heights of 14-18 meters.
The regional civil protection service has urged islanders to limit their movements to those strictly necessary, avoid all activity at sea and secure their homes by strengthening roofs, doors and windows.
The district of Santa Cruz das Flores, in the north of Flores island, remained calm on Thursday morning but local fishermen said they were afraid violent waves would damage the port.
Firefighters in Flores told an AFP photographer they were worried that the intense rainfall forecast for the evening might trigger landslides.


Norway police seize drone operated by foreigner near Oslo airport

Norway police seize drone operated by foreigner near Oslo airport
Updated 25 September 2025

Norway police seize drone operated by foreigner near Oslo airport

Norway police seize drone operated by foreigner near Oslo airport
  • The incident came after reports of drone sightings forced temporary shutdowns at Scandinavian airports
  • Lokke said that “At this stage, we see no connection” between these incidents

OSLO: Norwegian authorities have seized a drone operated by a foreigner near Oslo’s airport, after drones led to several flight disruptions in Norway and Denmark this week, a prosecutor with Norway’s police said Thursday.
A man, in his 50s, was flying the drone Wednesday evening in a restricted area, but it did not affect air traffic, Lisa Mari Lokke, head of prosecutions at Norway’s eastern police district, told AFP.
He was not arrested but will be questioned by police, she added, declining to specify the man’s nationality.
“Yesterday around 9:00 p.m. (1900 GMT) police were informed that a drone had entered the no-fly zone of Oslo airport,” Lokke said.
“When we arrived at the site, we found a man in his fifties piloting the drone,” she said, adding that police then landed and seized the device.
The incident came after reports of drone sightings forced temporary shutdowns at Scandinavian airports this week, including in Copenhagen and Oslo.
But Lokke said that “At this stage, we see no connection” between these incidents.
Overnight Monday to Tuesday, air traffic at the Oslo airport was suspended for about three hours after a possible drone sighting was reported.
Lokke said lights had been seen in the air and an investigation was underway to determine whether it had been a drone.


Nigeria top court takes up WhatsApp blasphemy case

Nigeria top court takes up WhatsApp blasphemy case
Updated 25 September 2025

Nigeria top court takes up WhatsApp blasphemy case

Nigeria top court takes up WhatsApp blasphemy case
  • The Kano State High Court later overturned the conviction but also ordered a retrial
  • Harsh punishments for violations of Islamic law are rarely handed out — and almost never implemented

ABUJA: Nigeria’s Supreme Court held its first hearing in a high-profile blasphemy case Thursday that defense lawyers hope will lead to a ruling that puts curbs on sharia law.
Yahaya Sharif-Aminu, a Sufi Muslim musician, was sentenced to death by a sharia court in Nigeria’s northern Kano state in 2020 for sharing song lyrics deemed to insult the Prophet Muhammad.
The Kano State High Court later overturned the conviction but also ordered a retrial — an outcome his lawyers are trying to prevent while seeking a wider ruling on punishments for violating sharia law, including the death penalty for blasphemy and adultery.
“All various aspects of the sharia penal code that offend the constitution and Nigeria’s international obligations, we cannot have on our statute books,” lawyer Kola Alapinni told reporters after the court granted an extension for his team to file their appeal.
Though Nigeria’s federal government is secular, sharia law operates alongside common law in 12 mostly Muslim northern states.
Harsh punishments for violations of Islamic law are rarely handed out — and almost never implemented. Death sentences for adultery and blasphemy since the courts were established 25 years ago, have either been overturned or paused pending appeal.
However, mobs in the socially conservative north have been known to carry out vigilante justice for alleged blasphemy.
As the case has wound its way to Nigeria’s highest court, civil and religious liberties advocates from the United States, European Union and United Nations have voiced support for Sharif-Aminu.
In April, the international court for the west African regional bloc, the Community Court of Justice of the Economic Community of West African States, determined Kano’s death penalty for blasphemy was “excessive and disproportionate.”
Nigeria has not enforced the ruling.
Sharif-Aminu is alleged to have shared lyrics in a WhatsApp group that said that a Muslim religious leader he followed was more pious than the Prophet Muhammad, Islam’s founder, Alapinni told AFP.
Lamido Abba Sorondinki, a lawyer for the Kano state government, told reporters that “anybody that has uttered any word that touches the integrity of the holy prophet, we’ll punish him.”
Standing next to him, Alapinni laughed and quipped: “My learned friend is not the Supreme Court — that’s just the opposition.”
Sharif-Aminu remains in detention as his appeal continues.


UK’s Palestine recognition ‘worthless’ without action against Israeli aggression: British flotilla member

UK’s Palestine recognition ‘worthless’ without action against Israeli aggression: British flotilla member
Updated 25 September 2025

UK’s Palestine recognition ‘worthless’ without action against Israeli aggression: British flotilla member

UK’s Palestine recognition ‘worthless’ without action against Israeli aggression: British flotilla member
  • Louie-Joe Findlater calls for sanctions, expulsion of diplomats after aid flotilla attacked by drones
  • British citizens on board do not ‘feel protected in the slightest’ by London’s lack of response

LONDON: The UK’s recognition of Palestine is “worthless” if London does not act to stop Israeli aggression against its citizens, a British man aboard a flotilla trying to breach the blockade of Gaza has warned.

Louie-Joe Findlater, 33, is traveling as part of the 52-boat Global Sumud Flotilla taking aid to the besieged Palestinian enclave.
The flotilla has come under pressure from signal jamming and drones, which the GSF said “launched explosives and gases on boats.”

Findlater called on the UK to take concrete steps to pressure Israel, including taking “solid actions like sanctions, like expelling ambassadors and diplomats.”
He added that British citizens taking part in the flotilla do not “feel protected in the slightest” by London’s lack of response.

Findlater told the PA news agency: “We’re making all the best decisions we can, but ultimately, we’re a boat floating at sea and we need the protection of our governments to guarantee that we’re going to stay safe.”

He said they were “under attack,” he had witnessed “enormous flashes, explosions and loud bangs,” and “recognition (of Palestine) alone is worthless if they (the UK government) don’t actually take action to protect their citizens 
 when they’re on a humanitarian aid mission through international waters, legal by all international law.”

He added: “We need to make sure we can get that aid to Gaza, and if they really do recognise Palestine, they should recognise our right to do so and the right of the Palestinians to receive that 
 We are obviously very concerned about our security.”

The activity against the GSF has prompted international condemnation, with Findlater’s local MP Neil Duncan-Jordan urging the UK government to step in on behalf of Britons on the flotilla.

He wrote in a letter to Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper that he is “deeply alarmed by the increasingly concerning rhetoric from the Israeli Foreign Ministry towards the Freedom Flotilla, a group of boats delivering vital humanitarian aid to Gaza,” adding: “I request that you set out how the United Kingdom will uphold the human rights of the humanitarian volunteers within the Freedom Flotilla. Louie must be allowed to deliver aid without obstruction.”

Other nations with citizens aboard the flotilla have been stronger in their stance. Italian Defense Minister Guido Crosetto said Rome has deployed a frigate to the area the flotilla is currently in, off the coast of the Greek island of Crete, “for possible rescue operations,” adding: “In a democracy, demonstrations and forms of protest must also be protected when they are carried out in accordance with international law and without resorting to violence.”

Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez said international law needs to be upheld and “the right of our citizens to navigate the Mediterranean safely be respected.”