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Colombian air force planes sent to fetch deportees from US

Colombian air force planes sent to fetch deportees from US

BBC News28-01-2025
US officials had said earlier that the visa restrictions would not be lifted until the migrants who had been turned back on Sunday had landed in Colombia.
Neither the US nor the Colombian government have provided details of the deal that defused the situation.
White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt wrote in a statement that "the Government of Colombia has agreed to all of President Trump's terms, including the unrestricted acceptance of all illegal aliens from Colombia returned from the United States, including on US military aircraft, without limitation or delay".
Meanwhile, Colombian Foreign Minister Luis Gilberto Murillo said that the "impasse" with Washington had been "overcome".
Murillo added that his government would continue to receive Colombian deportees in "dignified conditions".
It is not currently clear if Colombia will continue sending air force planes to the US to collect deported migrants or if Tuesday's two flights were a one-off.
Central American and South American leaders are expected to discuss how to deal with the Trump administration's migration policy at a summit convened by Honduras in the wake of the Colombia-US spat.
President Petro has already confirmed his attendance.
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The Latest: Trump says no to US troops in Ukraine
The Latest: Trump says no to US troops in Ukraine

The Independent

timea few seconds ago

  • The Independent

The Latest: Trump says no to US troops in Ukraine

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Justice department reportedly investigating DC police for allegedly manipulating crime data
Justice department reportedly investigating DC police for allegedly manipulating crime data

The Guardian

timea minute ago

  • The Guardian

Justice department reportedly investigating DC police for allegedly manipulating crime data

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She also undermines recent reporting which showed few interactions have been witnessed in the parts of the city with the highest rates of crime. Updated at 8.13pm CEST 7.28pm CEST 19:28 Leavitt confirms the 'president has definitively stated, US boots will not be on the ground in Ukraine, but we can certainly help in the coordination and perhaps provide other means of security guarantees to our European allies'. When asked about the change of plan (moving from a trilateral meeting to a one-on-one meeting with Putin and Zelenskyy first), Leavitt adds: 'he [Donald Trump] wants these two countries to engage in direct diplomacy. He said that from the very beginning.' A reminder that my colleague, Lucy Campbell, is covering the latest developments on Europe, and the war in Ukraine in detail. You can follow along here. Updated at 7.56pm CEST 7.22pm CEST 19:22 Press secretary Karoline Leavitt has kicked off the White House briefing. 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She'll take questions from reporters, and we can expect to hear more about the ongoing negotiations between the US and European allies about security guarantees for Ukraine; the federal takeover of the DC police and the increase in national guard troops from other GOP led states; and the president's baseless claims undermining mail ballots and voting machines. Updated at 7.19pm CEST 7.01pm CEST 19:01 Dharna Noor Trump tariffs and green energy rollbacks push household electricity bills up 10% Household electricity bills have increased by 10% since Donald Trump re-entered the White House, a new report has found, with its authors highlighting the impact of the president's datacenter boosterism and cuts to clean energy projects as part of the cause. The analysis comes as the US energy secretary, Chris Wright, said he knows rising energy prices could be a political challenge for the GOP ahead of next year's midterm elections, but claimed Democrats were to blame for the cost increases. 'The momentum of the Obama-Biden policies, for sure that destruction is going to continue in the coming years,' he told Politico in an interview published on Tuesday. 'That momentum is pushing prices up right now. And who's going to get blamed for it? We're going to get blamed because we're in office.' Trump has repeatedly promised to lower utility bills. And in his Politico interview, Wright insisted that the Trump administration's war on renewable energy is not inflating electricity costs. But studies have found that Trump's pro-fossil fuel, anti-renewable energy policies will raise prices. A July report from climate thinktank Energy Innovation, for instance, found that the Republicans' spending megabill that the president signed last month could increase wholesale electricity prices by as much as 74%, largely due to its repeal of many Biden-era green energy incentives. 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Updated at 6.41pm CEST 6.34pm CEST 18:34 Kira Lerner As Donald Trump's federal takeover of Washington DC's police entered its second week, and six states vowed to send hundreds of additional national guard troops to assist the administration, residents questioned why federal agents seem to be largely patrolling high-profile but low-crime parts of the nation's capital. The Washington Post has tracked where federal forces are patrolling the city, finding that few interactions have been witnessed in the parts of the city with the highest rates of crime. The White House rejected that claim today, saying that 'nearly half of non-immigration related arrests have happened in the most crime-hit areas in DC', but before today, the White House had been releasing data showing many of their arrests were of undocumented immigrants, and few federal agents have been spotted addressing or responding to violent crime. Instead, Washingtonians have seen officers from the FBI, Department of Homeland Security and other offices standing around prominent tourist sites and nightlife corridors, responding to minor disturbances and creating disturbances of their own. Over the weekend, several military vehicles were seen outside Union Station, positioned next to where passengers find their ride share vehicles. The Department of Defense posted a photo of a tan Humvee outside the train station on X on Saturday and said: 'This We'll Defend.' Federal agents and vehicles have also been spotted across the National Mall, including the Lincoln Memorial, where violent crime is virtually nonexistent. Visible confrontations between federal officers and protesters have also occurred along 14th Street, a popular nightlife destination. Amanda Moore, a Washington-based writer and researcher, wrote on X early on Saturday morning that she witnessed '15 federal agents call an ambulance for a very, very drunk and sick girl' in Dupont Circle, another center of nightlife. Stan Veuger, a senior fellow at the conservative American Enterprise Institute thinktank, joked on X, referring to the 'department of government efficiency': 'I was wrong about Doge. The federal government is efficient now.' In the Mount Pleasant neighborhood, which is home to a large Hispanic population, US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (Ice) shared a video on Sunday of at least seven agents taking down a banner supporting immigrant neighbors from a public park. 'Mount Pleasant melts Ice,' the banner read. After removing it, a masked agent says: 'Mine. We're taking America back baby.' According to a local reporter and a neighbor's surveillance camera footage, the agents left a dildo in its place. The banner was quickly replaced. Updated at 6.42pm CEST 6.30pm CEST 18:30 Attorney general Pam Bondi and FBI director Kash Patel have tapped Missouri attorney general Andrew Bailey to serve as co-deputy director of the bureau alongside Dan Bongino, Fox News reports. Bondi told Fox News, of Bailey: He has served as a distinguished state attorney general and is a decorated war veteran, bringing expertise and dedication to service. His leadership and commitment to country will be a tremendous asset as we work together to advance President Trump's mission. 6.25pm CEST 18:25 Three US destroyers will arrive off Venezuela coast as part of effort against drug cartels – report Three US Aegis guided-missile destroyers will arrive off the coast of Venezuela in the next 36 hours as part of an effort to address threats from Latin American drug cartels, two sources briefed on the matter told Reuters yesterday. According to the sources, the ships are the USS Gravely, USS Jason Dunham and the USS Sampson. Earlier this month, the New York Times (paywall) reported that Donald Trump had secretly signed a directive to the Pentagon to begin using military force against certain Latin American drug cartels that his administration has deemed terrorist organizations, providing an official basis for the possibility of direct military operations at sea and on foreign soil against cartels. Updated at 6.30pm CEST

Swiss Army knife production may move to US amid Trump tariffs
Swiss Army knife production may move to US amid Trump tariffs

Times

timea minute ago

  • Times

Swiss Army knife production may move to US amid Trump tariffs

America could wrest control of the manufacture of Swiss Army knives away from their Alpine homeland in a coup for President Trump's trade policy. Victorinox, which has made the knives in Ibach, Switzerland, since 1884, is considering moving part of its production to the US to soften the blow from import tariffs on its business. Carl Elsener, chief executive of Victorinox, told the German business magazine WirtschaftsWoche: 'We are looking into carrying out directly on site individual processing steps at the end of the value chain, such as the final cleaning and packaging of commercial knives.' 'That would reduce the value of the goods on which we have to pay customs duty by 10 per cent,' he added. Since 1884, Victorinox's founding family, the Elseners, have worked to keep manufacturing the Swiss Army knife in Switzerland. The country has been severely hit by Washington's trade policy under Trump, who earlier this month increased US tariffs on Swiss imports to 39 per cent. The US is a leading export market for Swiss brands including Swatch, Rolex and Patek Philippe watches as well as high-end cheeses and chocolates. Victorinox, which makes commercial knives as well as its well-known pocket knives, generates some 13 per cent of its revenue in the US. Elsener told WirtschaftsWoche that the customs duties were coming at an already difficult time. 'The strong Swiss franc has put our competitiveness and our margins under considerable pressure,' he said. Still, high inventories in the US meant the tariffs would not affect Victorinox until early next year, he added. For now, the firm would wait and see how things develop, he said. Industry associations and economists have said the tariffs will inflict major damage on the Swiss economy, put jobs at risk and curtail growth. They could also push the Swiss National Bank to cut interest rates next month. Economic uncertainty caused by Trump's trade policies has fuelled demand for the safe haven Swiss franc, boosting the currency and making Swiss-made goods more expensive abroad.

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