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Ice deported three US citizen children, including a boy with cancer, to Honduras, suit alleges

Ice deported three US citizen children, including a boy with cancer, to Honduras, suit alleges

The Guardian2 days ago
A lawsuit filed in Louisiana on behalf of two mothers and their four minor children, including one with cancer, claims the two families were unlawfully denied due process and deported by US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (Ice) to Honduras in April 2025.
The lawsuit, which names attorney general Pam Bondi, Department of Homeland Security secretary Kristi Noem and various Ice officials as defendants, alleges Ice violated its own policies, and multiple federal laws, when officers secretly detained the families, denied access to counsel and swiftly deported them to Honduras, ignoring legal filings.
The claim, JLV v Acuna, filed by the National Immigration Project, says that three of the children – a four-year-old boy with stage 4 kidney cancer, his seven-year-old sister and a two-year-old girl – were included in the deportation sweep despite being American citizens.
The parents 'were never given a choice as to whether their children should be deported with them and were prohibited from contacting their counsel or having meaningful contact with their families to arrange for the care of their children', the lawsuit claims.
The mothers, pseudonymously named as Rosario and Julia, allege they wanted their children to remain in the US but the families were 'illegally deported without even a semblance of due process'.
One of the children, named as five-year-old Romeo, was diagnosed with a 'rare and aggressive form of kidney cancer' at age two and had been receiving treatment in the US.
'The failure to allow his mother to arrange for his care, in violation of Ice's own directive, and his unlawful deportation to Honduras interfered with his needed medical treatment,' the suit, filed in the US district court for the middle district of Louisiana on 31 July, states.
Sirine Shebaya, executive director of the National Immigration Project, said in a statement that 'Ice's actions in this case are not only unlawful, they are cruel and show a complete disregard for family values and the wellbeing of children'.
'No government agency should have the power to disappear families, ignore medical needs, and disregard its own policies and constitutional rights simply in order to achieve a goal of unfettered enforcement,' Shebaya added.
Department of Homeland Security assistant secretary Tricia McLaughlin said in a statement to NBC News that US children were not being 'deported' and denied that the parents were not given a choice regarding the care of their children before being sent to Honduras.
'Rather than separate their families, ICE asked the mothers if they wanted to be removed with their children or if they wanted ICE to place the children with someone safe the parent designates. The parents in this instance made the determination to take their children with them back to Honduras,' McLaughlin said.
McLaughlin added that when there is a health issue, 'ICE makes sure that treatment is available in the country to which the illegal alien is being removed. The implication that ICE would deny a child the medical care they need is flatly FALSE, and it is an insult to the men and women of federal law enforcement.'
The lawsuit comes amid claims and counterclaims about the number of people being swept up in the administration's immigration enforcement efforts, and the legality of those efforts under the Alien Enemies Act of 1798.
There have been more than 1,000 deportation flights to 62 countries since Donald Trump was sworn into office in January, according to the immigrant advocacy group Witness at the Border.
But that number of flights is becoming more difficult to track, the group warns, after air charter companies began requesting that their tail numbers be removed from public flight-tracking websites.
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Rosario, one of the mothers named in the lawsuit, told the legal group that the deportation experience had been 'scary and overwhelming'.
'After so many years in the United States, it has been devastating to be sent to Honduras,' she said. 'Life in Honduras is incredibly hard. I don't have the resources to care for my children the way they need.'
The other, Julia, said: 'This whole situation has been incredibly stressful.' She had arrived in the US in 2019 after fleeing Honduras and applied for asylum, but was forced to wait in Mexico under Trump's first-term 'remain in Mexico' policy. She returned to the US in 2021.
The lawsuit states that she was told to check in with Ice, bringing both of her daughters to her regular Ice check-ins in February 2021. But in April she went to an appointment and was soon told she would be deported along with her children.
'I was lied to,' she said. 'I never imagined they would send me and my children to Honduras. Returning to Honduras has meant leaving my husband behind, and that's been very hard. My daughters have also suffered a lot. We were deprived of the opportunity to be and make decisions as a family.'
Her attorney claims that an Ice officer told her to write on a piece of paper that her daughter would be going with her to Honduras. When she objected, an Ice officer allegedly told her that if she refused, her daughter would be sent to a foster home.
The Department of Homeland Security said in its statement to NBC News that it 'takes its responsibility to protect children seriously and will continue to work with federal law enforcement to ensure that children are safe and protected'.
In a statement, Erin Hebert of Ware Immigration said Ice officials had 'betrayed their most basic duty: to safeguard the wellbeing of US citizens. These children and their families deserve justice and accountability for the flagrant and unapologetic violations of their rights.'
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‘Putin clearly won': Pundits say meeting was ‘bad for Americans' after Trump's ‘no deal' Alaska summit
‘Putin clearly won': Pundits say meeting was ‘bad for Americans' after Trump's ‘no deal' Alaska summit

The Independent

time10 minutes ago

  • The Independent

‘Putin clearly won': Pundits say meeting was ‘bad for Americans' after Trump's ‘no deal' Alaska summit

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Now we know just how useless Trump's Alaska summit really was ... to everyone but Vladimir Putin
Now we know just how useless Trump's Alaska summit really was ... to everyone but Vladimir Putin

The Independent

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Now we know just how useless Trump's Alaska summit really was ... to everyone but Vladimir Putin

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Waiting for them on the tarmac was a stage emblazoned 'ALASKA 2025,' festival-style, primed for the photo-op. Meanwhile, at least seven civilians had just been killed in Ukraine by Russian missiles. When they emerged again for a post-meeting press conference, earlier than expected, it was clear a good time had been had by all. They had agreed on 'most points,' said Trump. He was going to 'call up NATO,' he added, saying, 'I will, of course, call up President Zelensky and tell him about today's meeting." Very good of him. They should meet, Putin added, but 'next time in Moscow.' Trump laughed at that point, calling his suggestion 'an interesting one.' 'I'll get a little heat on that one,' the American president added, 'but I could see it possibly happening.' The two men leaned in toward each other and smiled, like they were sharing an inside joke. The bottom line: a nebulous amount of 'progress' made, some 'headway,' stuff to talk about, but 'there's no deal until there's a deal.' Ah well. Maybe Vlad just needs more time. I'm pretty sure, however, that he already got what he came for — and that the joke is on America. Contrast the kid-gloves treatment of everybody's favorite dictator with the treatment of Volodymyr Zelensky a few months ago, when he visited the White House. Indeed, it is hard to recall another Oval Office meeting where an allied head of state was treated quite like the Ukrainian president was in February. Lest we forget, Zelensky had arrived to discuss a minerals deal that might have bolstered his country's three-year fight for survival. He left having been publicly chided, mid-meeting, for 'disrespect' and insufficient gratitude. Trump accused him of 'gambling with World War III', while JD Vance, in full Wormtail mode, jumped in to ask: 'Have you even said thank-you once?' It was both difficult and embarrassing to watch. This is the asymmetry at the heart of Trump-era foreign policy: allies get the tongue-lashing, rivals get the literal red carpet. Zelensky's reward for resisting an existential threat was a televised scolding. Putin's reward for creating it has been years of deference and flattery. Recall the Helsinki summit, where Trump sided with the Russian leader over his own intelligence agencies, or the warm praise for Putin's 'genius'. Too self-satisfied to realize he's been manipulated, The Donald simply keeps walking into the same trap, over and over again. Trump himself seems to have realized how poor his own negotiating skills are in the past few weeks. Putin's not a blowhard like his American counterpart; he just does what he feels like, and everyone else be damned. Indeed, it was Donald himself who put it best in a press conference earlier in July where he described his ongoing efforts to help broker an end to the war in Ukraine thus: 'I get home, I say to the First Lady, 'I had the most wonderful talk with Vladimir. I think we are finished,'' to which Melania will apparently respond in kind: 'That's funny, because they just bombed a nursing home.' Therein lies the entire issue. Trump is brittle and easily manipulated; Putin talks him round again and again. Trump leaves those conversations utterly convinced of both Putin's integrity and his own genius. Then Putin goes on dropping bombs and killing people. It's a familiar story that's played out not just in Russia, and that we can expect to play out anywhere where there's a strongman leader with a penchant for basic flattery. 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Putin and Trump fail to reach Ukraine peace deal
Putin and Trump fail to reach Ukraine peace deal

Telegraph

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  • Telegraph

Putin and Trump fail to reach Ukraine peace deal

Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin failed to reach a deal to end the war in Ukraine after three hours of high-stakes talks in Alaska. The US president described the discussion as 'extremely productive' but said a deal to end the long-running conflict had not ultimately been agreed. 'We had an extremely productive meeting, and many points were agreed to,' Mr Trump said in a press conference at the Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson in Anchorage. 'There are just a very few that are left. Some are not that significant. One is probably the most significant, but we have a very good chance of getting there.' 'There's no deal until there's a deal,' he added. Putin, who travelled to the US for the first time in a decade, was allowed to open the press conference, saying the war in Ukraine was a 'tragedy for us and a terrible wound'. The leaders departed the stage after just 12 minutes without taking any questions. Putin, who spoke for twice as long as Mr Trump, also had the last word, suggesting the pair would meet 'next time in Moscow'. It was an abrupt ending to an otherwise friendly meeting that began when Mr Trump greeted the Russian leader with a smile and an outstretched hand as he disembarked his private aircraft. The leaders walked down respective red carpets and Mr Trump clapped as the Russian president approached, before they shared a warm embrace. Standing side by side on the tarmac in front of the travelling press pool, Putin faced a barrage of questions about his war in Ukraine. Under the roar of a US military flyover, the Russian leader shrugged and gestured to his ear, suggesting he couldn't hear the reporters who asked if he would stop killing Ukrainian civilians. 'I would like to hope that the agreement that we have reached together will help us bring closer that goal and will pave the path towards peace in Ukraine..,' Putin later said during the post-summit press conference. He added: 'We expect that Kiev and European capitals will perceive that constructively and that they won't throw a ranch in the works.' It came after the White House unexpectedly announced the joint press briefing would go ahead earlier than planned. Hundreds of journalists crammed into the room, divided with Russian media on one side and western journalists on the other. An expanded bi-lateral meeting, which had been planned to take place over lunch with the president's economic advisors, was scrapped. During his six hour 45 minute flight to Alaska, the US president had warned that he would 'walk' if the meeting did not go to plan. But after three hours of discussions he appeared on stage flanked by Putin, whom he referred to at one point as 'the boss'. Near the end of the conference, Mr Trump said he would contact Volodymyr Zelensky and other European leaders to discuss the progress of the talks. 'I will call up the various people that I think are appropriate, and of course, call up president Zelensky and tell them about today's meeting. It's ultimately up to them,' he said. Mr Trump's talks with Putin were initially intended to be one-on-one, but the White House announced both leaders would be accompanied by two of their advisers while Mr Trump was mid-flight. Marco Rubio, the US secretary of state, and Steve Witkoff, the US special envoy who had been credited with bringing Putin to America, flanked the president. Oleksandr Merezhko, chairman of the Ukrainian parliament's foreign affairs committee, said the negotiations to end the war in Ukraine had proved a 'failure' as Mr Trump failed to secure a ceasefire. Mr Merezhko told The New York Times that Putin had appeared as an equal to the US leader. 'He won the informational war... He used Trump to show that he is not isolated,' he said. Mr Trump also faced criticism from democrats and US media who accused the president of legitimising Putin and the war with the welcome he afforded him. While Mr Trump failed to produce any details about a path to peace, The Telegraph on Friday revealed that Britain is poised to put 'boots on the ground' in Ukraine within a week of a ceasefire being declared. Plans have been made for hundreds of British military trainers and engineers to enter the country if fighting pauses, to help rebuild Ukraine's armed forces. Sir Keir Starmer has also signed off on the use of RAF fighter jets to help police the skies over Ukraine with allies to ensure Russia does not breach any truce. It would mark a significant escalation in Britain's role in helping Kyiv see off the Russian threat towards Ukraine, bringing with it risks for those deployed. European allies, who have been working on the plans for months under a partnership dubbed the 'coalition of the willing', pushed them ahead with renewed urgency this week in anticipation of the summit.

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