Mahmoud Khalil is suing Donald Trump’s administration over its refusal to release its communications with shadowy anti-Palestinian organizations and individuals in the lead-up to when it arrested the student protest leader last March.
Khalil was the first of many foreign students targeted by the Trump administration, which revoked their visas – in Khalil’s case, his green card – purely based on their speech criticizing Israel and supporting Palestine. Khalil, a Columbia University graduate, spent over three months in Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) detention, as Trump sought to deport him.
In July, it was revealed in court that ICE had used information from Canary Mission and Betar – two of the pro-Israel and anti-Palestinian, anti-speech doxxing groups – to generate leads on students to target, including Khalil.
“For months, shady organizations and individuals carried out a smear and harassment campaign designed to intimidate and silence me,” Khalil tells Zeteo. “The public deserves full accountability for every bad actor who helped make that possible, including those at Columbia who fabricated and amplified these smears and opened the door for state retaliation against Palestinian speech.”




The Israeli military carried out one of the deadliest attacks on Gaza since the “ceasefire” took effect last month, killing over 30 Palestinians, the majority of them women and children, and wounding dozens more in a series of airstrikes late Wednesday and early Thursday. The dead and wounded arrived at hospitals in an endless stream, children were covered in dust and blood, men carried small bodies wrapped in shrouds, and wails of grief rose in the air
The U.S. Coast Guard will reportedly no longer consider swastikas, nooses, or the Confederate flag to be hate symbols, according to forthcoming guidelines obtained by The Washington Post, though the service branch denies changing its stance towards such imagery.
At least 25 Palestinians were killed in four Israeli airstrikes on Wednesday, in a part of Gaza under Hamas control since a shaky ceasefire took effect in October, the local Health Ministry said.
A large Russian drone and missile barrage on Ukraine’s western city of Ternopil killed at least 25 people, including three children, authorities said Wednesday, as President Volodymyr Zelenskyy went to Turkey in search of diplomatic support for his fight against Russia’s invasion.





























