logo
Trump Administration To Reverse Termination Of Legal Status Of Int'l Students

Trump Administration To Reverse Termination Of Legal Status Of Int'l Students

Barnama26-04-2025

US President Donald Trump in the Oval Office at the White House in Washington, April 7, 2025. REUTERS/Kevin Mohatt
SAN FRANCISCO, April 26 (Bernama-Xinhua) -- The Trump administration said on Friday that it will reverse the termination of the legal statuses of more than 1,200 international students amid legal challenges, Xinhua reported.
US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) is in the process of manually restoring the status for individuals whose Student and Exchange Visitor Information System (SEVIS) records were terminated in recent weeks, a government attorney told a federal court in Oakland, California.
A similar statement was made by a government lawyer during a separate hearing in Washington, D.C.
bootstrap slideshow
"ICE is developing a policy that will provide a framework for SEVIS record terminations. Until such a policy is issued, the SEVIS records for plaintiff(s) in this case (and other similarly situated plaintiffs) will remain Active or shall be re-activated if not currently active and ICE will not modify the record solely based on the NCIC (National Crime Information Centre) finding that resulted in the recent SEVIS record termination," said a copy of the statement provided to media by Brian Green, attorney representing the plaintiffs.
SEVIS is the database that tracks compliance of international students with their visa requirements. NCIC, operated by the FBI, contains criminal records and other law enforcement data.
More than 1,200 international students have had their immigration statuses upended since late March, according to The Associated Press.
The mass termination had triggered a wave of lawsuits filed by students across the country, leading federal judges to issue temporary restraining orders to halt the practice.
-- BERNAMA-XINHUA

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

HK to tighten national security scrutiny of restaurants
HK to tighten national security scrutiny of restaurants

The Star

timean hour ago

  • The Star

HK to tighten national security scrutiny of restaurants

AUTHORITIES will toughen screening of catering premises for potential violations of national security, which civil servants should accord top priority in deciding on licence approvals, the city's leader said. Critics see the move as targeting the territory's many businesses, including cafes and restaurants, that have previously displayed posters, symbols or images expressing solidarity with its embattled pro-democracy movement. Such businesses, widely called the 'yellow economic circle', have faced growing pressure from authorities, such as tax inspectors, at a time when they are reeling from a broader economic and retail downturn. 'Food and environmental hygiene officers ... should place national security as the most important consideration and make appropriate assessments,' John Lee told reporters. He called the move 'appropriate and necessary', saying that all civil servants were expected to rate security as the highest priority under the national security law. The city's food and hygiene department would follow the law in considering new licences and renewing existing ones, he added. In recent years, authorities in the Asian financial hub have made use of sweeping national security laws imposed after mass anti-government protests in 2019 to systematically crack down on many of its liberal pockets. In May, the Food and Environmental Hygiene Department sent letters to thousands of food and entertainment premises, obliging them to accept new terms related to national security. In one document seen by Reuters, the government told business owners to ensure no activity in which they were engaged or involved in 'may constitute or cause the occurrence of an offence endangering national security'. The former British colony's crackdown on dissent, from arresting democratic activists to shuttering liberal media and civil society groups, has drawn criticism from countries such as Australia, Britain, Canada and the United States. — Reuters

Trump can abolish national monuments, US Justice Department says
Trump can abolish national monuments, US Justice Department says

The Star

timean hour ago

  • The Star

Trump can abolish national monuments, US Justice Department says

FILE PHOTO: A vehicle rides on a highway past a pair of buttes known as the Bears Ears in Bears Ears National Monument outside Blanding, Utah, U.S., October 22, 2023. REUTERS/Jim Urquhart/File Photo (Reuters) -President Donald Trump has the power to abolish two national monuments in California established by his Democratic predecessor Joe Biden, as well as any others created by past presidents, according to a newly released legal opinion from a key adviser within the U.S. Department of Justice. The May 27 document, which was released on Tuesday, reversed a 1938 legal opinion and sets the stage for the Republican president to eliminate federal protections for potentially millions of acres of land previously designated as national monuments. National monuments are created by presidents in recognition of a site's cultural, historical or scientific importance, while national parks are created by Congress largely to protect outstanding scenic features or natural phenomena. Lanora Pettit, who heads the Justice Department's Office of Legal Counsel, was asked by the White House to provide a new opinion as Trump considered whether to reverse Biden's decision in January in his final days in office to designate two California sites that hold significance to Native American tribes as national monuments. The Chuckwalla National Monument preserves more than 624,000 acres just south of Joshua Tree National Park. The Sattitla Highlands National Monument protects 224,000 acres where the dormant Medicine Lake volcano carved craters and lava tubes. Biden had relied on the Antiquities Act of 1906, a law that has been invoked by numerous presidents to designate over 100 national monuments. A 1938 opinion by Attorney General Homer Cummings, who served under Democratic President Franklin Roosevelt, has been long cited as constraining the ability of presidents to undo past designations. But in a 50-page legal opinion, Pettit concluded that the Antiquities Act gives presidents not only the power to establish national monuments on federal lands but also to determine that they never were or no longer are deserving of those protections. The White House has also asked Pettit to consider whether the Justice Department should disavow Cummings' prior opinion. She said it should, writing that the law's silence about whether a president could revoke a predecessor's designation of a monument should be understood as meaning he has such authority. "Thus, for the Antiquities Act, the power to declare carries with it the power to revoke," Pettit wrote. The legal opinion did note that since the earliest days of the Antiquities Act, presidents have 'from time to time diminished' the land set aside to protect monuments. Trump, in his first term, had reduced the size of the Bears Ears National Monument by 85% and the Grand Staircase-Escalante monument by half, both in Utah. Biden restored both monuments to their former size. But no president has abolished a national monument. It was unclear if and when Trump would revoke the monument status for the two California sites or any other monuments. Asked about the new legal opinion, White House spokesperson Harrison Fields in a statement cited the need to "liberate our federal lands and waters to oil, gas, coal, geothermal, and mineral leasing." (Reporting by Nate Raymond in Boston; Editing by Leigh Jones and Leslie Adler)

On US Army's 250th birthday, Trump calls LA protesters 'animals'
On US Army's 250th birthday, Trump calls LA protesters 'animals'

New Straits Times

timean hour ago

  • New Straits Times

On US Army's 250th birthday, Trump calls LA protesters 'animals'

FORT BRAGG, United States: President Donald Trump turned a trip marking the US army's 250th birthday into a political-style rally Tuesday, wrapping himself in martial symbolism as he defended his decision to send soldiers to protest-hit Los Angeles. The US commander-in-chief goaded troops to boo political opponents and the media and called protesters "animals" in what was meant to be a non-partisan event at Fort Bragg in North Carolina, the country's biggest military installation. The Republican president meanwhile reinforced his strongman image as he watched spectacular rocket fire, special forces training and parachute displays, standing behind sandbags while surrounded by military officers in camouflage. The event came days before tanks are set to rumble through Washington in a huge and highly unusual military parade on Saturday, which coincides with Trump's own 79th birthday. Trump has long shown a fascination for the military – and envy for the military parades that his foreign counterparts preside over. But on Tuesday he spent much of his speech talking about anything but the army, preferring instead to go on a diatribe on the Los Angeles protests. "They're incompetent," Trump said of California Governor Gavin Newsom and LA Mayor Karen Bass, as some troops in the audience booed. Newsom has attacked Trump as "dictatorial" after the president deployed thousands of troops including 700 active duty US Marines to Los Angeles following clashes sparked by US government immigration raids. Pointing at the "fake news," Trump said "look what I have to put up with" as troops booed again. Democratic former president Joe Biden also earned a few boos when Trump mentioned him. Trump then ramped up the military language as he promised to "liberate" Los Angeles, saying he would "not allow an American city to be invaded and conquered by a foreign enemy." The Republican also announced that he would be restoring the names of other US Army bases that, like Fort Bragg, honoured military figures of the pro-slavery Confederacy from the US Civil War. He was accompanied by Pentagon chief and former Fox News contributor Pete Hegseth, who hailed the end of what he called "woke" in the US military. In scenes that resembled one of his election rallies last year, Trump finally left the stage to cheers as he did his trademark dance to the Village People song "Y.M.C.A." The event comes in a week loaded with military symbolism for Trump. He made it clear earlier that he would not tolerate anyone spoiling the parade on Saturday – which marks the 250th anniversary of the army but falls on his birthday too. "If there's any protest that wants to come out, they will be met with very big force," Trump said earlier at the White House. For Trump, "what matters is the spectacle. And the military is a heck of a spectacle," said Peter Loge, director of George Washington University's School of Media. "The military parade, the military in Los Angeles is theater of leadership, theater of governing, without paying attention to the real-world consequences," Loge told AFP. Trump was sent to a military academy as a child by his property tycoon father, and seems to have loved military pomp ever since – even if repeated educational and medical deferments meant he could avoid the draft to fight in Vietnam. He first had the idea for a grand military parade after attending France's annual Bastille Day parade in Paris at the invitation of his friend, President Emmanuel Macron, but is only getting around to it in his second term. World War II meanwhile appears to have been increasingly on Trump's mind since returning to office. He recently designated May 8 "Victory Day," noting that unlike much of Europe, the United States had no day to mark the defeat of Nazi Germany – and he has repeatedly downplayed the role of US allies in the war. "Without us, you'd all be speaking German right now, maybe a little Japanese thrown in," Trump said at Fort Bragg. Critics say that Trump's military fascination underscores an authoritarian streak.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store