Waves of protesters flood US streets against 'king' Trump
Demonstrators protest amid tear gas during a No Kings Day protest against President Donald Trump's policies, in Los Angeles, California, U.S., June 14, 2025. (Reuters)
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South China Morning Post
32 minutes ago
- South China Morning Post
US considers adding 36 countries to travel ban, State Department memo says
US President Donald Trump's administration is considering significantly expanding its travel restrictions by potentially banning citizens of 36 additional countries from entering the United States, according to an internal State Department cable seen by Reuters. Earlier this month, the Republican president signed a proclamation that banned the entry of citizens from 12 countries, saying the move was needed to protect the United States against 'foreign terrorists' and other national security threats. The directive was part of an immigration crackdown Trump launched this year at the start of his second term, which has included the deportation to El Salvador of hundreds of Venezuelans suspected of being gang members, as well as efforts to deny enrolments of some foreign students from US universities and deport others. In an internal diplomatic cable signed by US Secretary of State Marco Rubio , the State Department outlined a dozen concerns about the countries in question and sought corrective action. 'The Department has identified 36 countries of concern that might be recommended for full or partial suspension of entry if they do not meet established benchmarks and requirements within 60 days,' the cable sent out over the weekend said. The cable was first reported by The Washington Post newspaper. Among the concerns the State Department raised was the lack of a competent or cooperative government by some of the countries mentioned to produce reliable identity documents, the cable said. Another was 'questionable security' of that country's passport.


South China Morning Post
4 hours ago
- South China Morning Post
How hapless Chinese scientists became ‘agroterrorists' in the US
Its name sounds forbidding – Fusarium graminearum – though most of us would have no idea what it is. But if the bosses at the FBI and the US Department of Justice made a big show of announcing the arrests of Chinese nationals charged with trying to smuggle samples into the United States in a suspected act of agroterrorism, you would be scared too. One of the three suspects is even a card-carrying Chinese communist. Case closed. Here's what Kash Patel, director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, wrote in a long post on social media. 'The FBI arrested a Chinese national within the United States who allegedly smuggled a dangerous biological pathogen into the country,' he wrote. 'The individual, Yunqing Jian, is alleged to have smuggled a dangerous fungus called Fusarium graminearum, which is an agroterrorism agent, into the US to research at the University of Michigan, where she works.' It gets worse: the woman is a communist! 'Evidence also indicates Jian had expressed loyalty to the Chinese Communist Party and had received funding from the Chinese government for similar work on this pathogen in China,' Patel continued. 'Jian's boyfriend, Zunyong Liu – also charged in the complaint – works at a Chinese university where he conducts research on the same pathogen. 'This case is a sobering reminder that the CCP is working around the clock to deploy operatives and researchers to infiltrate American institutions and target our food supply, which would have grave consequences ... putting American lives and our economy at serious risk.' Doesn't that sound scary? But wait, there are almost 100 million citizens who are party members in China. It's a bit like saying an American suspect is a Democratic or a Republican Party member.


South China Morning Post
5 hours ago
- South China Morning Post
US vaccine sceptics are now in charge. That's bad news for the world
When US Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jnr removed the vaccine advisory panel of the Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), he framed it as a move for the 'restoration of public trust'. But the implications stretch far beyond domestic politics. In dismantling one of the world's most respected sources of vaccine expertise, the United States is not just undermining its public health, it is ceding global scientific authority to China. Trump's elevation of figures like Pete Hegseth Tulsi Gabbard and Kash Patel made clear his second term would test the limits of mainstream thought. But Kennedy is the president's magnum opus. This is not some well-meaning reformer with unorthodox ideas, let loose to fix a broken health system. He is the embodiment of conspiracy masquerading as policy – an ideologue entrusted with the machinery of American public health. Kennedy has hand-picked eight replacements, including vaccine critics such as Vicky Pebsworth, who has served on the board of America's oldest anti-vaccine group. There is a trend here: Kennedy has promoted ideas so unhinged they barely warrant rebuttal. He claimed Wi-fi can cause cancer, compared US vaccine mandates to Nazi Germany's authoritarianism, mused that Covid-19 might have been ethnically targeted and posited that HIV does not cause Aids . If one tried to distil the collective fever dream ravings of a Reddit thread into human form, you'd get RFK Jnr. The CDC's Advisory Committee on Immunisation Practices has for decades been the gold standard for vaccine guidance – not merely for the US, but for the world. Its members are not political appointees but independent epidemiologists and immunologists with no obvious axe to grind, other than preventing disease and saving lives. To replace them with well-known sceptics is a purge, executed not in the name of transparency or science, but of ideology.