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Judge says government must release Columbia University protester Mahmoud Khalil

Judge says government must release Columbia University protester Mahmoud Khalil

NEWARK, N.J. (AP) — A federal judge has ruled that the government cannot deport and must release Mahmoud Khalil, the student whom the Trump administration jailed over his participation in pro-Palestinian demonstrations at Columbia University.
Khalil was detained by federal immigration agents on March 8 in the lobby of his university-owned apartment in New York. He was then flown across the country and taken to an immigration detention center in Jena, Louisiana.
Khalil's lawyers have challenged the legality of his detention. They say the Trump administration is trying to crack down on free speech. U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio says he has the power to deport Khalil because his presence in the U.S. could harm foreign policy.
U.S. District Judge Michael Farbiarz had ruled earlier that expelling Khalil from the U.S. on those grounds was likely unconstitutional.
In a new ruling Wednesday, the judge said that Khalil had shown that his continued detention is causing irreparable harm to his career, his family and his free speech rights.
Farbiarz gave the government until Friday to appeal the decision. He also required Khalil to post a $1 bond.

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Trump administration tells immigrants from four countries who entered U.S. under humanitarian program to leave
Trump administration tells immigrants from four countries who entered U.S. under humanitarian program to leave

Globe and Mail

time31 minutes ago

  • Globe and Mail

Trump administration tells immigrants from four countries who entered U.S. under humanitarian program to leave

The Department of Homeland Security said Thursday that it has begun notifying hundreds of thousands of Cubans, Haitians, Nicaraguans and Venezuelans that their temporary permission to live and work in the United States has been revoked and that they should leave the country. The termination notices are being sent by email to people who entered the country under the humanitarian parole program for the four countries, officials said. Since October 2022, about 532,000 people from Cuba, Haiti, Nicaragua and Venezuela were allowed to enter the U.S. under the program created by the Biden administration. They arrived with financial sponsors and were given two-year permits to live and work in the U.S. DHS said that the letters informed people that both their temporary legal status and their work permit was revoked 'effective immediately.' It encouraged any person living illegally in the U.S. to leave using a mobile application called CBP Home and said that individuals will receive travel assistance and $1,000 upon arrival at their home country. The department did not provide details on how the U.S. government will find or contact the people once they leave or how they will receive the money. Trump promised during his presidential campaign to end what he called the 'broad abuse' of humanitarian parole, a long-standing legal tool presidents have used to allow people from countries where there's war or political instability to enter and temporarily live in the U.S. Trump promised to deport millions of people who are in the U.S. illegally, and as president he has been also ending legal pathways created for immigrants to come to the U.S. and to stay and work. His decision to end the parole program for Cubans, Haitians, Nicaraguans and Venezuelans was challenged at the courts, but the Supreme Court last month permitted the Trump administration to revoke those temporary legal protections. Immigration advocates expressed concern over the Trump administration decision to send the notices to more than a half million individuals. It 'is a deeply destabilizing decision,' said Krish O'Mara Vignarajah, president of Global Refugee, a nonprofit organization that supports refugees and migrants entering the U.S. 'These are people that played by the passed security screenings, paid for their own travel, obtained work authorization, and began rebuilding their lives.' Zamora, a 34-year-old Cuban mother who arrived under the sponsorship of an American citizen in September 2023, said she fears deportation. However, for now, she has no plans to leave the country. 'I am afraid of being detained while my son is at school,' said Zamora, who asked to be identified only by her last name out of fear of being deported. 'I'm afraid to return to Cuba, the situation is very difficult there.' Zamora said she has sought other ways to remain in the U.S. legally through the Cuban Adjustment Act, a law that allows Cubans who have arrived legally to the U.S. and meet certain requirements to apply to get a green card. Although her process has not been approved yet, she is hopeful it may allow her to remain legally in the U.S. In the meantime, she said that she will stop working at a clinic if needed. 'I'm going to wait quietly without getting into trouble,' the Cuban said.

‘Shocked' and ‘sickened' Democrats react with fury to video of Padilla's removal
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Winnipeg Free Press

time33 minutes ago

  • Winnipeg Free Press

‘Shocked' and ‘sickened' Democrats react with fury to video of Padilla's removal

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Jewish student group calls on TMU to discipline incoming interim dean over anti-Israel social posts
Jewish student group calls on TMU to discipline incoming interim dean over anti-Israel social posts

Vancouver Sun

time38 minutes ago

  • Vancouver Sun

Jewish student group calls on TMU to discipline incoming interim dean over anti-Israel social posts

Hillel Ontario is calling on Toronto Metropolitan University to investigate Maher El-Masri, a recently appointed interim associate dean, because the group says he has 'repeatedly engaged with and spread extreme, antisemitic, and deeply polarizing content on his social media account.' Hillel Ontario, a Jewish student organization with a presence on nine campuses across the province, including TMU, sent an action alert last Thursday alongside several screenshots of social media posts from an account Hillel says belongs to El-Masri. The X account is under El-Masri's name and the biography describes the user as the 'son of (a) Nakba survivor,' referring to Palestinian refugees from the 1948 Arab-Israeli War. The account states that the user is in Ontario, has a Palestinian flag for its profile picture and a background quote claiming 'humanity is failing the Palestine test.' One message Hillel highlighted from the account concerned a post about Noa Marciano, an Israeli intelligence soldier abducted by Hamas on Oct. 7, 2023, during its invasion of Israel. Marciano later died in captivity. 'This is what is so scary about people like her,' the TMU professor wrote beneath a graduation photo of Marciano, which claimed she was killed in an Israeli airstrike. 'They look so normal and innocent, but they hide monstrous killers in their sick, brainwashed minds.' Start your day with a roundup of B.C.-focused news and opinion. By signing up you consent to receive the above newsletter from Postmedia Network Inc. A welcome email is on its way. If you don't see it, please check your junk folder. The next issue of Sunrise will soon be in your inbox. Please try again Interested in more newsletters? Browse here. Marciano's friend, Ori Megidish — another hostage rescued by Israeli forces in late October 2023 — said she was killed by a doctor in al-Shifa hospital. Her parents said the same thing in subsequent interviews. 'I hate everyone who directly or indirectly caused this indignity to the most honorable and most dignified people on Earth,' an undated post flagged by Hillel reads alongside broken heart emojis, an apparent reference to the conflict in Gaza. In December 2023, El-Masri was interviewed by CBC for a story about his brother, who he said was killed by Israeli forces in Gaza while searching for food. El-Masri has continued to post about the conflict on the X account, which remains open to the public. 'Israel is a baby killer state. It always has been,' he wrote on June 6, a day after the Hillel notice. Some of his posts compare Israel to Nazi Germany, a comparison deemed antisemitic by the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance (IHRA). On May 7, 2025, El-Masri commented on a photo of a proposed humanitarian zone in Gaza. 'The irony of history: The last time such a concentration camp was erected, it was by the Nazis!' El-Masri returns to the point repeatedly throughout his social media feed. 'How could a people who have endured the worst human persecution in the holocaust carry this deep hate and inflict unimaginable pain on a nother (sic) people who, in fact, had nothing to do with the holocaust!!!!' he wrote last June. 'When the victims of the holocaust call for a holocaust,' El-Masri wrote in early May 2025. He has also downplayed the role of Hamas in the conflict on several occasions. 'This is NOT a war against Hamas. This is a genocidal war against the very existence of the Palestinian people,' he wrote in August 2024. In May 2025, he argued that ''Hamas' is the zionists' code word to dehumanize the Palestinian people.' National Post reached out to El-Masri for comment but the professor responded with an email ordering the Post not to contact him anymore. He described the allegations around the content of his social media account as a 'smear campaign.' Liat Schwartz, a Jewish TMU student in the same department as El-Masri, called his online statements alarming, 'especially since I'm openly Jewish.' Schwartz, the president of a pro-Israel group on campus, called on university leaders to protect 'the well-being of Jewish and Israeli students,' saying El-Masri's presence 'makes me feel profoundly unsafe and unheard within my own faculty.' Hillel Ontario called on TMU to rescind El-Masri's appointment as interim dean. 'TMU's decision to promote Dr. El-Masri, despite his extensive history of promoting antisemitic and extremist content, is egregious,' Jay Solomon, the group's chief advancement officer, told the Post in a written statement. 'Those in leadership positions must be held to the absolute highest standard, and ensure that all students — including Jews and Israelis — feel supported. This appointment sends exactly the opposite message. TMU must act swiftly in removing El-Masri and alter their process to ensure this doesn't happen again.' University spokesperson Jessica Leach underscored the personal impact the ongoing conflict was having on members of the university community but said that El-Masiri's 'posts do not reflect the position of the university.' 'The posts are his personal views as a faculty member, with no mention of or affiliation with TMU. The university is reviewing this matter,' she said in a written statement encouraging university members 'to be respectful, collegial, and empathetic.' Leach initially challenged Hillel's press release, claiming the organization was mistaken and El-Masiri was not a dean. When asked if El-Masiri had ever held the position of dean, interim or otherwise, Leach wrote the Post that he had not. Her response was contradicted by Hillel, who shared with the Post an email sent in early June apparently from the Faculty of Community Services dean announcing El-Masiri's appointment. 'Dr. El-Masri has a demonstrated track record of excellence in teaching, research and service, and he is widely respected for his enormous engagement with health care systems in Toronto, across Ontario, and even globally,' the email says. TMU later followed up with a statement confirming that El-Masri has been appointed an assistant dean, but he has not yet assumed the post. 'His appointment as interim-acting Assistant Dean is not effective until July 1. Until that time, Dr. El-Masri is the director of the school of nursing, a faculty-level position. Directors within faculties, such as Dr. El-Masri's position, are not administrators. They are full members of the Toronto Metropolitan Faculty Association (TFA),' the statement says. El-Masri is scheduled to be the convocation speaker for the Faculty of Community Services graduation event on June 18. Steven Tissenbaum, a recently retired TMU business professor, said the university's failure to properly deal with allegations of antisemitism has coloured life at the downtown Toronto campus since the October 7 massacre. He called the administration's failure to discipline dozens of law students who signed a letter defending 'all forms of Palestinian resistance' days after the Hamas atrocities 'the real defining moment' for him. 'Jewish professors at large recognize that TMU is not a place to be,' Tissenbaum told the Post, explaining this realization is spreading to Jewish students and families as well. Two other academics from TMU reiterated Tissenbaum's point but wished to remain anonymous because they are still actively teaching at TMU. 'I am writing to let you know that it is worse for faculty and staff,' one tenured academic, who wished to remain anonymous, wrote the Post after an earlier story chronicling the harassment Schwartz and other Jewish students experienced on campus was published. 'Faculty who are demonstrably Jewish have been attacked, harassed, and threatened, and some have even resigned.' Tissenbaum taught at TMU for nearly three decades and said the university has grown increasingly insensitive to the concerns of Jewish academics and students. He was particularly alarmed by the university's faculty association passing a motion in May recognizing anti-Palestinian racism (a new term which advocates for the dismantling of the IHRA working definition of antisemitism) at a time of increased Jew hatred. 'The undercurrents of antisemitism have been there,' he said, recalling a time in the nineties when someone drew a swastika on his desk. When he raised the incident during a university diversity and equity session, Tissenbaum says he 'was ghosted' and that no one responded to his concerns. 'It's always been there, but what's happened since October 7 is that it provided a spark for people to be outwardly aggressive with their antisemitism.' Tissenbaum decided to retire early from TMU. He stepped away in August 2024. 'I retired primarily due to the increased antisemitism being experienced on campus due to the lack of administrative support from the president down,' he wrote the Post. Although Tissenbaum said he did not feel physically threatened on campus, he believes the treatment Jewish students have endured in recent years is not conducive to a healthy learning atmosphere. The entrepreneurship professor sees TMU's troubles since the October 7 terrorist attacks as part of a broader national malaise. 'What's happening in TMU is a microcosm of what's happening everywhere else. Canada is not a safe place,' he said. 'TMU is not a safe place for Jewish students. It's not a future.'

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