
Activist Mahmoud Khali: Trump administration targeting those who don't fit its vision of America
Home to staff members and postgraduates studying at the University of Columbia, inside the lobby it is library-quiet.
But the peace here was shattered on an ordinary Saturday four months ago when agents from ICE - the United States Immigration and Customs Enforcement - snatched one of its student residents as he came back from dinner with his heavily pregnant wife.
Watching the video Noor Khalil filmed on her phone as Mahmoud was taken is a slightly surreal experience.
"You don't need to do that," she says incredulously, as men who refuse to tell her who they are working for handcuff her Palestinian husband. As they bundle him into a car she frantically calls a lawyer; audibly fighting back tears as Mahmoud is driven away into the night.
In the months before she sees him again, Noor gives birth to their first child, a little boy called Deen. It's a moment the couple have dreamt of for years. But Mahmoud misses it all because ICE has flown him more than a thousand miles south to a detention centre in Louisiana. The 30-year-old international relations specialist was held there for 118 days.
When we meet he has been home for a fortnight, finally reunited with his wife and getting used to life as a new dad. But his sadness at having missed out on the first few weeks of Deen's life is palpable.
'This was absolutely the heaviest moment in my entire life,' he tells me. 'I went through the Syrian War.
"I went through living in a Palestinian refugee camp. I went through so many hardships, but this particular moment was the most heartbreaking.'
He was allowed to phone his wife as she gave birth. The American government says its detention facilities are safe and humane but Mahmoud says he was sharing a dormitory with around 70 other men with no privacy.
'It was after midnight, around one, two, in the morning,' he remembers. 'I was just listening on the phone, trying to send supportive words, not knowing if she actually could hear me or not.'
'I was so worried about that,' he sighs. 'Because I know what this moment meant for her - to have me holding her hand while delivering our baby.'
Khalil's crime had been to lead high-profile protests at Columbia University against Israel's war on Gaza - activities the American government alleged were anti-semitic and aligned him with the terrorist organisation Hamas.
I ask him if he is anti-semitic and he shakes his head.
'It's absurd to say this. I take anti-semitism concerns very seriously and I've privately and publicly denounced anti-semitism and said it has no place in the protest movement.'
I point out that with anti-semitic attacks on the rise, the demonstrations he led left some Jewish students feeling unsafe and uncomfortable; he counters that, as a Palestinian watching the horrors unfold daily in Gaza, he felt a moral duty to protest.
When I ask him whether it's his position to criticise US foreign policy, as a green card holder here at the government's leisure, he doesn't hesitate.
'I pay taxes, I pay my student fees here,' he says. 'I am simply asking them not to use my tax money to support a genocidal state.'
Mahmoud pauses to check on his wife and son who are resting and his worry is evident. They are both American citizens, but in a political climate where President Trump has vowed to end birthright citizenship, even their future feels uncertain.
He says he is not just anxious for Deen, but for every child.
'Because what this administration is trying to do is define what an American should be. Who is American and who is less American? They are coming after everyone who doesn't fit their vision of what an American citizen should be'.
He knows that for defenders of freedom of speech, his release from detention was seen as a win against an increasingly authoritarian government.
But it may be a short-lived victory. Within ten minutes of his release, the Trump administration had filed an appeal against the court ruling preventing his deportation. Mahmoud Khalil is still looking over his shoulder.
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Scottish Sun
21 minutes ago
- Scottish Sun
Trump RULES OUT US troops patrolling Ukraine to police peace deal as he reveals role America would play when war is over
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Geneva was being talked up as a more suitable location for the showdown. Switzerland, which remained neutral during both World Wars, has promised immunity to the Russian despot despite an International Criminal Court warrant out for his arrest. No knee bending is critical By Harry Cole AS the dust settles on that extraordinary White House gathering, what's left beyond some of the most astonishing pictures of world leaders in living memory? For Donald Trump's blowhard critics, even trying to seek an end to the bloody war is a new low, but that does not do the significance of Monday's meeting justice. The President pledged to continue to underwrite the safety of Ukraine with American might, in a huge U-turn on his campaign vows to withdraw from the world stage. Large swathes of his Maga base are going to hate that, but as British Ambassador Peter Mandelson said last night, Trump is a 'President with an appetite for risk that is enviable'. 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The Guardian
34 minutes ago
- The Guardian
Ice used Marriott chain to detain immigrants, despite hotel's 2019 pledge not to cooperate
A Sheraton hotel in Louisiana has been used by immigration officials to hold people who are being deported, in what appears to be a contradiction of a position Sheraton's parent company, Marriott, took in 2019 when it said its properties would not be used in cooperation with Ice. The Intercept first reported that the hotel, located on MacArthur Drive in Alexandria, Louisiana, near a major deportation hub and airport used by Ice, had been used by immigration officials earlier this month to hold a father and his teenage son for four days after their arrest in New York. They were then deported to Ecuador. The Intercept cited phone-tracking evidence that had been shared with the publication and was later seen by the Guardian. The evidence corroborates the account of a source with knowledge of hotel operations in Alexandria, who told the Guardian that they believed the venue had been used to detain immigrant families and unaccompanied children since it was renovated in late 2023. The source observed Ice contractors known to assist in the transfer of unaccompanied minors operating at the Sheraton as recently as June of this year. The source added that other hotels in the area have also been used to hold immigrant families. It is not clear whether Marriott has a formal contract with Ice or what the company knows about Ice's use of the Sheraton in Alexandria. In one case that emerged last year, Marriott sued a New York-based franchise after the hotel entered a partnership with the city for it to be used as an immigrant shelter, saying it had done so without Marriott's consent. Marriott did not respond to several requests for comment. 'It would be highly unfortunate if major hotel chains are facilitating the Trump administration's cruel policy of deporting families,' said Lee Gelernt, deputy director of the ACLU's Immigrants' Rights Project. In 2019, during Donald Trump's first term, Marriott rejected the idea that any of its hotels or properties – which include Sheraton and Courtyard hotels – would be used by Ice to detain immigrants. It made the statement at a time when the Trump administration was calling for a mass roundup of undocumented immigrants. Citing anonymous sources, ABC News reported at the time that administration officials had internally discussed the possibility that they might need hotel rooms because of limited capacity at Ice detention centers. 'Our hotels are not configured to be detention facilities, but to be open to guests and community members as well. While we have no particular insights into whether the US government is considering the use of hotels to aid in the situation at the border, Marriott has made the decision to decline any requests to use our hotels as detention facilities,' a company spokesperson said in July 2019, according to ABC News. The company's position won it plaudits at the time, such as public recognition by the American Historical Association, an association of professional historians, which announced in a public statement that it appreciated Marriott's 'principled stand' and noted the importance of immigrants to the hotel and related industries. It is well-documented that Ice does use hotels to house immigrant families who are being deported from the US or being transferred to other detention centers. In a case that attracted national attention in April, Ice detained two families in Louisiana with three of their US citizen children and held them incommunicado and under guard at a hotel for days on end, despite multiple attempts by family members and lawyers to contact them. The families, along with their US citizen children, were deported in the early hours of 25 April and, according to legal filings, had been held at a location in Alexandria. Filings in that case reviewed by the Guardian include a short, handwritten submission by one of the mothers written on paper that closely matches images of branded Sheraton notepads posted online. The Guardian could not independently confirm whether the families had been detained at the Sheraton in Alexandria. Sign up to Headlines US Get the most important US headlines and highlights emailed direct to you every morning after newsletter promotion The Intercept's reporting focused on the story of Edison Iza and his 15-year-old son, Roger, who were reportedly arrested by Ice at an immigration check-in New York on 9 August. The pair were then reportedly flown to Louisiana and 'locked up' in the Sheraton hotel, where they stayed for four days without access to their phones or the internet. 'We couldn't call or go on the web to ask for help,' Roger told the Intercept. 'Without our phones, we didn't know any names or phone numbers.' Ice did not immediately respond to the Guardian's questions about the agency's use of the Sheraton, including whether it has a contract with the hotel or uses it on an ad hoc basis. The hospitality industry is especially vulnerable to Ice raids and the Trump administration's deportation program, given the high percentage of workers in the industry who are undocumented. While the Department of Homeland Security issued guidance earlier this year that Ice agents were not to conduct raids at hotels, restaurants and farms, that guidance was later reversed, according to a June report in the Washington Post. About 34% of housekeepers, 24% of cooks and 20% of waitstaff employed by the US hotel industry is undocumented, according to the 2023 census. Additional reporting by Maanvi Singh Do you have a tip on this story? Please contact a Guardian reporter on Signal at 646-886-8761


The Independent
an hour ago
- The Independent
ICE adds two Mustang GT Fastbacks to its fleet – at Trump's request – in latest move to entice recruits
As morale among U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement personnel sinks to new lows, the Trump administration hopes spending more than $120,000 on a pair of high-performance Mustang GT Fastbacks will juice the embattled deportation agency's efforts to attract new recruits. Obtaining the vehicles was 'an immediate request by the White House, on Thursday August 7, 2025,' according to a federal procurement document reviewed by The Independent. It says the Mustangs are expected to 'enhance' the federal government's push to add some 14,000 new ICE agents 'by serving as a bold, high-performance symbol of innovation, strength and modern federal service,' and that the Mustang's 'eye-catching design increases public engagement at outreach events and helps attract top talent by conveying a culture of excellence and forward momentum.' 'Therefore, two (2) Ford Mustang GT vehicles were selected as they meet the ICE requirement,' explains the so-called justification-and-approval document, – known as a 'J&A' – which lays out the reasons why the contract was awarded without having issued the usual competitive bidding process. The agency's 'need for the services is so urgent and compelling that providing full and open competition would result in unacceptable delays and seriously hinder the Government's recruiting initiative,' according to the J&A, which was added to a federal contracting database on Tuesday. 'As a result, the sole source procurement methods/strategies must be pursued to meet mission-critical timelines.' ICE paid $121,450 for the cars, closing the deal with Banister Ford in Suitland, Maryland on August 11. One of the Mustangs was already spotted driving around D.C. on Monday evening, with a gold ICE logo and the words 'Defend the homeland' on the side. An ICE spokesperson acknowledged The Independent 's request for comment but did not provide one by publication time. The recruitment push by ICE is expected to last for at least two fiscal years, and the purchase of the Mustangs was 'fully supported' by Trump's signature One Big Beautiful Bill Act, the J&A states. There has been widespread public backlash to ICE as the administration's massive deportation push spreads nationwide. Congressional Republicans have set aside $30 billion for ICE to add some 14,000 immigration officers to support Trump's mass deportation agenda, along with $45 billion in new funding for ICE detention centers. In all, Trump's 'big, beautiful' bill earmarks more than $170 billion for immigration enforcement over the next 10 years, making ICE better-funded than most foreign militaries. At the same time, the government has halted important scientific research, hollowed out social programs, and reduced people's access to healthcare – all in the name of saving money. Last week, it emerged that ICE spent more than $700,000 to customize a group of SUVs and pickup trucks to be used for recruitment, including a Ford Raptor and a GMC Yukon tricked out to mimic the look of Donald Trump's private Boeing 757. A video posted by the Department of Homeland Security, ICE's parent agency, showed the vehicles cruising through Washington, D.C., and parked in front of the White House, the U.S. Capitol, the Lincoln Memorial and the Washington Monument, set to music by rapper DaBaby. All are painted navy blue, with red-and-white racing stripes and a gold ICE logo, which reflect the color scheme of Trump's aircraft. 'President Donald J. Trump' is printed in gold on the rear window, and, like the Mustangs, the words 'Defend the homeland' appear on the side. The trucks cost more than $500,000, with another $227,000 spent on custom automotive wraps, according to federal procurement records. Joining ICE is now easier than ever, as Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem lowered the minimum age to 18 and did away with the existing maximum. ICE is also offering signing bonuses of up to $50,000, along with student loan forgiveness and other perks for new recruits. The agency is specifically trying to target 'Gen Z and early-career professionals,' as well as former law enforcement officers, military veterans, and people from the legal field, according to a recent request for information. ICE hopes to target more than 42 million people across social media and via ads on Hulu, HBO Max, Amazon Prime, and other streaming networks, the RFI says. 'This is a critical priority,' according to the RFI. 'ICE has an immediate need to begin recruitment efforts and requires specialized commercial advertising experience, established infrastructure, and qualified personnel to activate without delay.'