
Judge orders release of Columbia student Mohsen Mahdawi from ICE detention after his arrest during citizenship interview
A federal judge in Vermont has ordered the release of a Columbia University student who was arrested at his citizenship interview and hauled off in handcuffs.
Mohsen Mahdawi, a lawful permanent resident and Palestinian who has held a green card for at least 10 years, was anticipating a scheduled interview as part of his citizenship process on April 14. Instead, hooded federal agents walked him into a car and drove off.
On Wednesday, District Judge Geoffrey Crawford determined that Mahdawi, who hasn't been charged with any crime, can be released.
Born and raised in a refugee camp in the West Bank, where he lived until moving to the United States in 2014, Mahdawi is among dozens of student activists marked for removal by Donald Trump's administration for their Palestinian advocacy.
Secretary of State Marco Rubio has revoked hundreds of student visas over campus activism, leading to several high-profile arrests of international scholars who are now awaiting deportation hearings, including in remote jails across the southern United States, while the administration conflates protests against Israel's war in Gaza with antisemitic violence.
After taking office, Trump signed an executive order that declares U.S. policy is to 'ensure' noncitizens 'do not … advocate for, aid, or support designated foreign terrorists and other threats to our national security.' Another executive order pledges 'immediate action' to 'investigate and punish anti-Jewish racism in leftist, anti-American colleges and universities' with a promise to 'deport Hamas sympathizers and revoke student visas,' according to a fact sheet from the White House.
Mahdawi's attorneys have described him as a 'committed Buddhist' who 'believes in non-violence and empathy as a central tenet of his religion.'
In a filmed interview with Vermont Democratic Senator Peter Welch inside an Immigration and Customs Enforcement detention center, Mahdawi said Rubio's invocation of a rarely used provision of the Immigration and Nationality Act to target people who are perceived as threats to foreign policy is conflating 'being anti-war as antisemitic.'
'How could that be possible when my partners, most of my partners at Columbia's campus, and beyond, are Jews and Israelis? My work has been centered on peacemaking,' he said. 'My hope and my dream is … to see an end to the war, an end to the killing, and to see a peaceful resolution between Palestinians and Israelis. How could this be a threat to anybody except the war machine that is feeding this?'
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