
Families of Italian nationals held in Alligator Alcatraz plead for their release
CNN — Two Italian nationals living in the United States are among the inmates currently being held at the ICE detention center known as 'Alligator Alcatraz' in Florida, according to Italy's foreign ministry.
Fernando Eduardo Artese, 63, and Gaetano Cateno Mirabella Costa, 45, were both sent to the facility, said to be surrounded by alligators, on immigration violations. Italy's foreign ministry confirmed to CNN that the two men were being detained in the US, but would not give any further details, citing privacy reasons.
The Italian government, led by Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni, has not publicly commented on the case or the conditions people are being kept in at the controversial facility. In 2024, Italy built migrant deportation centers in Albania, which were ultimately blocked by the courts because of questions over human rights issues.
Italian opposition politician and former speaker of the house Laura Boldrini has been leading calls for intervention by Meloni and her Foreign Minister Antonio Tajani. 'Is all this normal and acceptable for Giorgia Meloni? What does she intend to do to get the two Italians out of that hell? If they don't have the right to remain in the US, they will be repatriated, but subjecting them to these brutal conditions is Unacceptable,' Boldrini posted on X Monday. Questions during a parliamentary session regarding potential intervention also went unanswered.
The US Department of Homeland Security confirmed both men were detained in the makeshift facility in the Florida Everglades. 'Both of these criminal illegal aliens are being detained in Alligator Alcatraz. Under President (Donald) Trump and Secretary (Kristi) Noem, if you break the law, you will face the consequences. Criminal illegal aliens are not welcome in the US,' DHS spokesperson Tricia McLaughlin said in the statement.
Artese's daughter Carla Artese says her father, who is a dual Italian-Argentinian citizen who worked as a security camera technician, had been living legally in the US since 2018 under the Visa Waiver Program.
Fearful that a new clampdown would lead to his arrest, Artese decided to repatriate to Europe later this year, his daughter said.
Artese was stopped on June 25 while driving with his family in a camper van. He had the intention of leaving the US and driving to Argentina. The family had planned to document the journey on a YouTube channel called 'Argentinomades' according to Carla Artese, who is planning to start university in Spain, where she was born, in the fall.
But her father was stopped during a routine traffic stop and officers found an outstanding warrant for failing to appear in court for a driving violation, Carla Artese said. He was then detained and sent to 'Alligator Alcatraz' a week later.
DHS said Artese overstayed his visa by 10 years. 'He entered the US (on) the Visa Waiver Program on February 8, 2015, and was authorized to remain in the country until May 7, 2015. On June 26, 2025, Martin County Sheriff's Office arrested Artese for having an outstanding warrant relating for failure to appear in court for a criminal offense,' McLaughlin said in the statement.
'This year, we were trying to leave the USA, and ICE got him and sent him to Alligator Alcatraz, where they treat them like criminals and have no rights,' Carla Artese wrote on a fundraising page. 'They haven't given him any information about his case or any right to an attorney. Not to mention, they haven't added him to the system yet, so he doesn't even appear like an inmate anywhere. He wants to self-deport when they let him, which he also would have to pay for the ticket.'
The money raised is for an attorney to help free her father.
'He is a loving husband and dad. He has provided for all of us since day one. He is a father figure to me and many of my friends. He is a hard worker who only wanted to leave the country with his family after paying taxes and working hard the whole time he's been here!'
Artese described 'Alligator Alcatraz' as 'a concentration camp' in an interview earlier this month with the Tampa Bay Times. 'They treat us like criminals, it's a pursuit of humiliation. We're all workers and people fighting for our families.'
Meanwhile, Mirabla Costa spoke with Italy's state broadcaster RAI by phone over the weekend, describing the dire situation.
'We are literally caged, like a chicken coop. There are 32 of us in a cage, the bathrooms are open and everyone sees you,' he said. 'I don't even have the chance to speak to a lawyer, or a judge. Get us out of this nightmare.'
Mirabella Costa served six months in jail for domestic violence against his American ex-wife and for possession of prescription drugs and was arrested upon his release by ICE officials for violating immigration laws, he told the Italian outlet.
DHS says Costa overstayed his B2 visa by nearly 7 years, adding in a statement that his 'criminal history includes arrests for battery on a person 65 years or older, possession of a controlled substance, and marijuana possession. Osceola County Sheriff's office arrested him on February 26, 2025.'
His mother, Rosanna Mirabella Costa, told RAI that her son was taken to a preliminary hearing 'with shackles on his feet and shackles on his hands, like a dog. The only positive thing is that he can talk on the phone,' she added.
The Italian Consulate in Miami confirmed to CNN that they are working with the foreign ministry in Italy, which is in contact with the families of the detained, but could not share any details.
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Egypt Independent
10 hours ago
- Egypt Independent
Under attack from all sides, armed clans try to protect aid coming into Gaza
Securing the trucks carrying aid into Gaza is a tight balancing act for the Abu Mughsaib clan. Getting too close to the Israeli military checkpoints can turn deadly. But staying too far away gives looters a chance to get to the precious cargo first. 'This is the biggest challenge we face. We cannot approach army positions any closer, as doing so would put us at risk,' a member of the group that acts as a protection for the trucks told CNN. Two weeks ago, Hamas killed one of his team members and last month two were injured by Israeli fire, he said. As law and order further breaks down and famine takes hold across Gaza, agencies trying to get aid to warehouses and distribution points in the territory rely on groups such as Abu Mughsaib. 'Once the trucks enter (Gaza), we receive them before they are intercepted by looters or overwhelmed by crowds,' said the man, who asked to remain anonymous for security reasons. 'As for our weapons, they are simple family-owned firearms, and we also carry sticks and batons.' Aid convoys are increasingly being attacked by armed looters seeking to resell the aid at exorbitant prices, as well as crowds of starving people who are just hoping to feed their families. The UN said this week that it was still struggling to deliver aid to where it is needed most, and blamed Israel for delaying convoys by making the procedures too cumbersome. Palestinians hold onto an aid truck returning to Gaza City on July 22. Jehad Alshrafi/AP/File While the World Food Program said on Sunday that Israel has agreed to streamline the process and allow the use of alternative routes, the UN says a large proportion of trucks are still being blocked. Faced with allegations of purposefully starving the Gaza population, Israel has in turn blamed the UN, saying it is not distributing the supplies properly, and Hamas, which it accused of stealing aid. In the absence of official security, the Abu Mughsaib clan and other groups are stepping in. A member of the clan told CNN that international organizations including the World Health Organization had asked for security in delivering their aid. 'After we succeeded, our family-based group was formally established to serve that purpose,' the clan member told CNN, adding that the family is part of the Tarabin tribe, a prominent Bedouin family. 'We coordinate with a few other families and handle the securing of aid deliveries,' he said, adding that unlike other groups, the Abu Mughsaib are not working with either Israel or Hamas. A spokesperson for WHO said the organization works with 'various community elders' and the health ministry in Gaza to ensure that 'when critical aid is passing through… communities are informed and understand the items are lifesaving medical aid.' Palestinians carry aid supplies which they received from the US-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, in the central Gaza Strip on July 31. Reuters Accompanying the trucks is a risky business. The clan sent one video to CNN, which it said shows its members escorting a convoy of 10 trucks delivering aid. It shows armed men – some of whom are masked and some wearing high-vis vests – sat on top of the vehicles speeding along the Salah al-Din road in Deir al-Balah, shooting in the air. People can be seen running alongside the road, but nobody tries to intercept the convoy. The clan also said it has partnered with a third-party transport company in Gaza, which it claimed moves aid for humanitarian groups including the World Central Kitchen. A spokesperson for the World Central Kitchen said the organization does not work with the Mugaiseb Clan. The clan member who spoke to CNN said that while they do receive payments from some groups, they sometimes provide protection for free. 'Like with the World Health Organization, when it involves medicine or infant formula, we work on a voluntary basis. For private sector shipments and commercial goods, we are paid in return for the risks we take. Some organizations also provide small payments to cover fuel, ammunition, and similar costs,' he said. The UN said that the time-consuming approval process to get aid into Gaza often leaves trucks stuck in one location for a long time, attracting large crowds of people. Olga Cherevko, from the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA), was accompanying one such convoy as it tried to deliver aid from the Kerem Shalom border crossing earlier this week. She said the convoy was held for two and half hours at an Israeli checkpoint. 'By the time we were allowed to pass, we were met on the road by tens of thousands of hungry and desperate people who directly offloaded everything from the backs of our trucks,' Cherevko said. According to its own data, the UN and its partners have offloaded 2,134 trucks of aid at Gaza crossings since May 19, when Israel partially lifted a blockade that was imposed in March. While the UN said a vast majority of them, some 2,010 trucks, had been collected, only 260 arrived at their intended destinations. More than 1,750 were intercepted – either peacefully by hungry people or forcefully by armed gangs. Israel has accused Hamas of stealing aid, but an internal US government review found no evidence of widespread theft. More than 1,060 people have been killed and 7,200 injured while trying to access food in Gaza since May, according to the United Nations. Most died in the vicinity of distribution points set up by the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF), a controversial private venture backed by the United States and Israel. Palestinians carry aid parcels west of Beit Lahia in Gaza on July 29. Omar al-Qatta/AFP/Getty Images/File 'Worst case scenario of famine' Far too little aid is reaching those most in need, according to humanitarian agencies. Eyad al-Masri, a 31-year-old father of two with a third child on the way, used to buy food from people who got it at the notoriously dangerous aid distribution points. The prices were high, but still lower than at the market. But on Saturday, with no money left, he decided to go to the point near Netzarim in central Gaza himself. His is a common story. The Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC), a UN-backed initiative said Tuesday that 'worst-case scenario of famine' is unfolding in Gaza. The health ministry in the territory also said on Tuesday that 900,000 children are going hungry, and 70,000 already show signs of malnutrition. 'I felt I had no other choice,' al-Masri told CNN. 'When the trucks arrived, I was shocked by the number of armed thieves, some carrying knives, others with firearms, operating in large groups.' Al-Masri managed to get a box of food, and was overjoyed at the prospect of giving his children and pregnant wife at least some of what they so desperately needed. 'But as I was leaving the area, a man armed with a knife came at me and tried to take the box by force,' Al-Masri said. He offered to split the contents, but the attacker insisted on taking the entire thing. 'When I refused, he stabbed me multiple times in the head,' he said. Running after the thief, al-Masri didn't realize he was bleeding. He was focused on getting at least some of the food back – which he eventually managed with the help of others. 'There are starving people who come to these distribution areas, but they can't get anything because of the armed groups,' he said. The Abu Mughsaib clan member said attacks against his group are coming from all sides – from other families, organized gangs of looters, Hamas and the Israeli army. He said that in July, a member of the escort team was shot dead by Hamas, who later said the killing was a mistake. Palestinians mourn outside the Al-Shifa Hospital morgue, where the bodies of people killed while seeking aid the previous day were brought, in Gaza City on July 31. Bashar Taleb/AFP/Getty Images 'A month ago, (the Israeli army) opened fire on a vehicle carrying members of our escort team, injuring two of our men,' he added. He added, however, that the group will continue to provide security for as long as necessary. 'Vulnerable people urgently need food and medicine. We are not an alternative to any authority, nor do we aim to replace anyone,' he said. But he admitted the group's power only goes as far. 'We are under strict instructions not to harm any civilians. … Even if they manage to seize a truck in such cases, we let them take it without confronting them.' CLARIFICATION: This story has been updated to reflect the World Central Kitchen's statement that it does not work with the Mughsaib clan.


Egypt Independent
13 hours ago
- Egypt Independent
Israeli military chief warns against takeover of Gaza as Netanyahu considers ‘full conquest' of besieged territory
Israel's military chief warned against a full takeover of Gaza, according to three Israeli sources familiar with the discussions, as Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu considers ordering the 'conquest' of the besieged territory. In a meeting with top officials on Tuesday evening, Israel Defense Forces (IDF) Chief of Staff Lt. Gen. Eyal Zamir cautioned that fully conquering Gaza would trap the military within the enclave and put the remaining hostages at risk, the sources said. Such a move, Zamir said, would also increase the burden on Israeli forces when the military is already suffering from attrition and burnout rates amongst reservist forces. According to two of the sources, Zamir's plan called for encircling Gaza City and other neighborhoods in which hostages might be held, while Netanyahu was pushing for a more intrusive operation into the heart of the areas. Netanyahu will urge a meeting of the security cabinet Thursday to support the full 'conquest of the Strip', CNN has previously reported, in what would mark a major escalation of the Israeli campaign at a time when the government is under international pressure for a truce. The latest disagreement underscores the growing discord between Israel's military leadership and its political echelon. Israel's military has recommended pursuing diplomacy to end the war, while Netanyahu and his government have pushed for maximalist war goals. The Israeli military says it already controls approximately 75 percent of Gaza following nearly two years of war which has left much of the territory in ruins and triggered a humanitarian crisis. Israel withdrew from Gaza two decades ago, but Zamir warned that a complete military occupation could ensnare the IDF anew. Zamir's warning once again put the new military chief at odds with the far-right parties in Israel's government, who have repeatedly called for broadening Israel's bombardment and siege of Gaza to destroy Hamas, something Israel has been unable to do despite nearly two years of fighting. Minister of National Security Itamar Ben-Gvir demanded on social media that Zamir publicly state 'in his own voice' that he will follow the country's political leadership, 'even if a decision is made regarding conquest and decisive action.' After Tuesday's meeting, the Prime Minister's Office issued an official statement stating that, 'the IDF is prepared to implement any decision made by the Security Cabinet.' On Wednesday, Netanyahu also met with the leader of Israel's opposition, Yair Lapid, who issued a video statement afterwards calling the conquest of Gaza 'a very bad idea.' 'You don't embark on such a move unless most of the nation is behind you,' said Lapid. The people of Israel are not interested in this war – we will pay too have a price for it.' Polling has repeatedly shown that the majority of Israelis favor an end to the war in exchange for the release of the remaining 50 hostages in Gaza. Starvation crisis Gaza's health ministry meanwhile reported its highest death toll in weeks on Wednesday, with 138 killed in the past 24 hours. Five people died of hunger in the past 24 hours, the health ministry said Wednesday, bringing the total number of those who died of starvation and malnutrition to 193, including 96 children. Only 1.5% of Gaza's farmland can be accessed and is undamaged as of July 28, United Nations data has found, underscoring 'the tiny amount of cultivable land that remains in the Gaza Strip' amid the starvation crisis in the enclave. Aid groups say only a fraction of the required aid has been getting into the crowded and war-devastated enclave. A major focus of aid group criticism has been a controversial US and Israel-backed aid distribution network called the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF). The GHF was created to sideline the United Nations' role in distributing aid, after Israel complained that UN aid was reaching and being stolen by Hamas. An internal US government review found no evidence of widespread theft by Hamas, CNN reported in July, contradicting the State Department's claims that were used to justify backing GHF. The new group has also been criticized for failing to improve conditions as Gaza's starvation crisis deepens. The UN refused to participate in the new scheme, saying the GHF model violates basic humanitarian principles. More than 1,000 Palestinians have been killed by the Israeli military while trying to get food, hundreds of them near GHF sites, according to the UN. The GHF disputes this. For two months, the scenes at GHF's four distribution sites have been chaotic, with the Israeli military seen firing towards scores of Palestinians, some of whom have been crushed in the scramble to reach aid. Multiple UN experts earlier this week called for the GHF network to be dismantled. The US has dismissed the criticism. Mike Huckabee, the US ambassador to Israel, visited a GHF run site last week and said on Wednesday that the network would expand. 'The immediate plan is to scale up the number of sites up to 16 and begin to operate them as much as 24 hours a day,' he told Fox News interview. 'The president has been telling us he wants foods into the hands of hungry people but he wants it in a way that it doesn't get into the hands of Hamas. That's exactly what we did when we stood up GHF,' he added. CNN has reached out to GHF for comment on Huckabee's comments. 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Egypt Independent
13 hours ago
- Egypt Independent
Russian drones hunt civilians as Putin zeroes in on Ukraine's Kherson
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