US judge rules deportation flight to Libya would violate court order amid reported Trump administration plans – live | Trump administration


Federal judge rules deportation flight to Libya would violate court order

A federal judge in Massachusetts ruled on Wednesday in favor of immigrant rights advocates who asked him to block the government from deporting migrants to Libya, amid reports that the US military planned to fly detained immigrants there this week.

District court judge Brian Murphy issued an order clarifying that a previous injunction he had issued already barred such flights. The judge wrote that he had explained on 30 April that “the Department of Homeland Security may not evade this injunction by ceding control over non-citizens or the enforcement of its immigration responsibilities to any other agency, including but not limited to the Department of Defense”.

“If there is any doubt — the Court sees none — the allegedly imminent removals, as reported by news agencies and as Plaintiffs seek to corroborate with class-member accounts and public information, would clearly violate this Court’s Order” Murphy clarified.

In a rare show of unity, Libya’s rival governments had already responded to news reports by saying that they would refuse to accept any deportees from the United States.

When Donald Trump was asked on Wednesday if his administration was planning to send migrants to Libya, the president replied: “I don’t know. You’ll have to ask Homeland Security please.”

The brutal conditions in Libyan detention centers for migrants forcibly returned after trying to reach Europe across the Mediterranean have been known about for years. In 2021, Amnesty International reported that it had obtained more than 50 witness accounts documenting severe beatings, sexual violence, extortion and forced labor in the centers.

Trump himself has previously made it clear that he is well aware that Libya is far from a safe place.

During his first campaign for the presidency in 2016, Trump blamed Hillary Clinton for the violence in post-revolutionary Libya.

“Libya is in ruins. Our ambassador and three other really brave Americans are dead” then-candidate Trump said in a speech in August 2016. “President Obama and Hillary Clinton should have never attempted to build a democracy in Libya” he added.

However, Trump was actually for the intervention in Libya before he was against it.

In early 2011, when he was flirting with a run for the presidency, Trump demanded immediate action to topple Col. Muammar el-Gaddafi in a statement posted on the YouTube channel he used to promote his game show, The Apprentice.

“I can’t believe what our country is doing,” Trump said on February 28, 2011, two weeks before the Obama administration got Security Council authorization “to protect civilians” in Libya. “Gaddafi in Libya is killing thousands of people, nobody knows how bad it is, and we’re sitting around we have soldiers all have the Middle East, and we’re not bringing them in to stop this horrible carnage”.

“We should do, on a humanitarian basis, immediately go in to Libya, knock this guy out — very quickly, very surgically, very effectively —and save the lives. After its all done, we go to the protesters, who end up running the country… and then say, By the way, from all of your oil, we want reimbursement.”

Five months later, after the US-led air campaign had forced Gaddafi from power in Libya — and Trump had decided not to challenge Obama for the presidency — the star of The Apprentice posted another YouTube clip, complaining that the administration should have waited longer to aid the Libyan rebels, to force them to agree to surrender half of the country’s oil reserves.

Share

Updated at 

Key events

Confirmation hearing off for Trump’s surgeon general pick, amid questions over Fox News doctor’s resume

The Senate confirmation hearing for Donald Trump’s nominee to serve as US surgeon general, Fox News contributor Dr Janette Nesheiwat, has been cancelled amid reports that the White House is withdrawing the nomination.

Bloomberg News first reported that the White House is pulling its nomination Nesheiwat, who has come under fire for allegedly misleading statements about where she went to medical school and, from vaccine skeptics, for promoting vaccination against Covid-19.

The confirmation hearing was scheduled for Thursday, but Nesheiwat’s name has been removed from the revised witness schedule by the Senate committee on health, education, labor and pensions.

When Trump announced the nomination of the Fox News regular, he described Nesheiwat as a “proud graduate of the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences”. However, as CBS News reported last week, Nesheiwat “actually earned her medical degree from the American University of the Caribbean (AUC) School of Medicine, located in St. Maarten” before completing her residency at the University of Arkansas.

Until the CBS report was published, Nesheiwat’s LinkedIn profile incorrectly listed an MD from the University of Arkansas School of Medicine and made no mention of AUC.

The network also reported that the doctor previously used a formulation of the Caribbean university’s name that might have misled people into thinking she had attended the American University in Washington DC.

“I completed my medical training and residency at the University of Arkansas Medical Sciences near Little Rock where I served as Chief Resident”, Nesheiwat wrote on Facebook in 2018. “Initially pursuing training at the American University, I completed the majority of my studies in London, England, at St. Thomas & Guy’s Hospital.”

Nesheiwat’s nomination has been heavily criticized by Trump supporters from the far-right, including Dr Simone Gold, an emergency physician who entered the Capitol on January 6 2021, and told Trump supporters not to take “an experimental biological agent deceptively named a vaccine”. On social media, Gold complained that Nesheiwat had urged Americans to wear masks during the pandemic, said the vaccine was “safe and effective”, and praised Facebook and Mark Zuckerberg for cracking down on misinformation about the pandemic. “Is she Dr. Fauci 2.0?” Gold asked.

Trump’s confidante, the Islamophobic, 9/11 truther Laura Loomer campaigned against Nesheiwat on social media, writing on Sunday that her “promotion of DEI-focused initiatives” and “her advocacy for the China Virus ‘vaccine’” made her “unfit for the role of United States Surgeon General”.

If Nesheiwat’s nomination has been withdrawn, it will be the second time in a week Trump has lost confidence in her family. Her older sister, Julia, a homeland security adviser to Trump during his first term who also served in the Obama administration, is married to Mike Waltz, Trump’s now former national security adviser.

Share

Updated at 


Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *