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Thursday, Feb 19th

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Settler activists, including far-right MK, illegally cross into Gaza; IDF troops called to scene

Settlers cross into GAZAA group of settler activists, among them far-right MK Limor Son Har-Melech, illegally breached into the Gaza Strip this evening, prompting the IDF to dispatch troops to the scene.

“We were privileged, with thanks to the blessed God, to enter the Gaza Strip, together with the Nachala movement and dozens of families, women, men, and children,” the Otzma Yehudit lawmaker writes on social media.

The activists from the ultra-nationalist Nachala settlement organization say they crossed the Gaza border with vehicles and planted trees in the area.

The IDF has not yet commented on the incident, but in previous similar cases has said that crossing the Gaza border “is dangerous and disrupts the activity of security forces in the area.”

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Haitian TPS holders ‘hopeful’ after a pause in protection status termination

Hautuans hhopefulEarlier this month, a federal judge paused the termination of temporary protection status (TPS) for more than 350,000 Haitians in the U.S. The move offered some temporary stability for recipients who wish to retain work authorization and legal status while deliberations on its expiration continue. 

In November, Secretary of the Department of Homeland Security Kristi Noem determined that Haiti no longer met the conditions for its designation of TPS status. On Feb. 2, the day before the status was set to expire, U.S. District Judge Ana C. Reyes denied the Trump administration’s motion to dismiss a lawsuit challenging the determination. This has now paused the termination of TPS for Haitians until the Davidson, who requested to only be mentioned by his first name for safety reasons, is one of more than 45,000 Haitian TPS holders from Massachusetts. He has been under this status since 2010 and said that he felt stressed in the lead-up to the decision.

“You don’t know what’s going to happen next,” he said. “Your future is going to depend on that decision… A lot of people, they don’t have a plan B.”

Davidson, who requested to only be mentioned by his first name for safety reasons, is one of more than 45,000 Haitian TPS holders from Massachusetts. He has been under this status since 2010 and said that he felt stressed in the lead-up to the decision.

“You don’t know what’s going to happen next,” he said. “Your future is going to depend on that decision… A lot of people, they don’t have a plan B.”

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TPS was originally implemented for Haitian immigrants for 18 months following a disastrous 7.0 magnitude earthquake that struck Haiti in January 2010. The designation has since been extended multiple times because of continuing gang violence, political unrest, and food shortages in the country.

As part of the Trump administration’s immigration crackdown, it is attempting to reduce the number of countries that retain TPS for their citizens. In her DHS notice of termination, Noem said that there are no extraordinary and temporary conditions in Haiti that prevent Haitian nationals from returning safely. She stated that even if the DHS found that such conditions existed, it is “contrary to the national interest of the United States to permit” Haitian nationals to remain in the U.S.

In her 83-page ruling, Reyes said that Noem’s analysis did not include the full extent of supposed outreach to various agencies to determine Haiti’s level of safety. The U.S. Department of State currently gives a “Level 4” warning against travel to Haiti, its highest designation, stating that visiting the country poses life-threatening risks.

“That’s like a death wish for everybody that you send back, especially in its current situation,” Davidson said. “It’s not safe, especially for children that they wanted to send back with the parents. I don’t think it would be fair.”

Preistelle Aristil is a junior political communication major at Emerson College whose parents immigrated from Haiti. She said that while the situation in Haiti is beginning to “quiet down,” political unrest still exists.

“These people are seeking stability. They deserve to have a country where, even though the United States is in a mess right now, it’s way better than what it is in [Haiti],” Aristil said. “If these people need jobs or the financial opportunities here [that] exceed the opportunities in Haiti, they deserve to go and get those opportunities.”

Reyes said Noem’s decision also ignores economic considerations, which must be considered when terminating TPS. Instead, Noem “ignores altogether the billions Haitian T.P.S. holders contribute to the economy,” Reyes wrote in her decision.

Haitian TPS holders contribute nearly $6 billion annually to the U.S. economy. If their status were to be revoked, the healthcare industry estimates that Massachusetts could lose about 2,000 long-term caregivers, a position that is already one of the most understaffed in the state according to the Worcester Business Journal.

“The amount of Haitians that we have working in the medical industry, whether it’s in the hospitals, nursing homes, group homes, we actually take care of a lot of elders in Boston,” Davidson said. “This is us showing how good of a heart that we have for caring for people that we don’t really know.”

Despite their contributions, he expressed that, as a TPS recipient, he has been labeled as a criminal or illegal.

“We had the opportunity to have the TPS, to get a job and work just like everybody else, pay taxes, and contribute to the community,” he said.

Doris Landaverde is a coordinator for the Massachusetts TPS Committee, an advocacy organization dedicated to protecting TPS, providing a path to permanent residence, and educating people on the process of obtaining TPS. She said that, more recently, recipients sometimes pay more than $1,000 to renew their status.

“Every 18 months, we have to renew.They check our background, take our fingerprints. If we make a mistake, they do not approve the TPS anymore,” Landaverde said.

The hold in termination comes amid heightened fear in Haitian communities nationwide who are facing racial discrimination and increased immigration enforcement. The Trump administration’s mass deportation campaign has terminated status for 21,600 TPS holders from Afghanistan, Cameroon, and more than 300,000 Venezuelans.

The administration has also taken steps to terminate the status for more than one million people from 11 nations: Burma, Ethiopia, Haiti, Honduras, Nepal, Nicaragua, Syria, Somalia, South Sudan, and Yemen. Leaving only four other countries, including El Salvador and Ukraine, protected under TPS ahead of the normal expiration date.

In light of the uncertainty and fear, Aristil said that Emerson should acknowledge these federal actions.

“Emerson should at least put out a statement about something with TPS or the fact that they’re standing with Haitian students,” Aristil said. She explained that although Emerson is a predominantly white institution, “people choose Emerson because it’s a sanctuary school.”

With DHS canceling TPS for millions, nonprofits are struggling to assist all impacted families. Landaverde said it is hard for immigrants to find resources in the aftermath of this decision.

“People are losing their work. People will need food. People will need a house,” she said.

Haitian TPS recipients remain in limbo amid the government’s appeal process, with no available path to legal residence. Davidson said that when deported, many TPS holders don’t have a home or even a family to return to after being gone for more than 20 years.

“What are you going to do or where are you going to go? Who are you going to contact in those kinds of situations?” Davidson said.

About the Contributor
Catalina Mena
Catalina Mena, Deputy News Editor
Catalina Mena (she/her) is a freshman journalism and political communications double major from Melrose, Massachusetts. When she’s not at The Beacon, Catalina can be found working with WEBN, running, eating food with her friends, or listening to Bad Bunny.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


Former Prince Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor Arrested

Prince AndrewAndrew Mountbatten-Windsor was arrested Thursday by a local U.K. police force on suspicion of misconduct in public office, an extraordinary development as the former royal faces intense scrutiny over his ties to late sex predator Jeffrey Epstein.

He is the first senior member of the royal family to face arrest in nearly 380 years.

Thames Valley Police issued a statement announcing that they detained “a man in his sixties from Norfolk” The police statement did not name the former prince, but the report is consistent with Andrew’s alleged misconduct.

The agency had previously said it was evaluating a complaint that Andrew may have shared confidential information with Epstein.

After about 12 hours in the Aylsham Police Investigation Centre, a black Range Rover came to gather the former prince. The BBC reported that Andrew attempted to lie down in the back seat, but was not able to do so before he could be snapped by a photographer. were “carrying out searches at addresses in Berkshire and Norfolk.”re

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Judge throws out ruling backing Trump mass detention policy

Sunshine SykesA federal judge on Wednesday vacated an immigration court ruling giving the Trump administration broad powers to detain migrants, forcing them to give bond hearings and then possibly release thousands in custody.

The ruling from U.S. District Court Judge Sunshine Sykes excoriated the Trump administration’s claims that it is targeting the worst of the worst for deportation.

The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) and U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) are at times relying on shaky legal ground to detain migrants, wrote Sykes, an appointee of former President Biden, and migrants are therefore entitled to a bond hearing to determine whether they may pursue their immigration case outside of ICE detention.

“‘Worst of the worst’ is an inaccurate description of most of those affected by DHS and ICE’s operations. Perhaps in utilizing this extreme language DHS seeks to justify the magnitude and scope of its operations against non-criminal noncitizens. Maybe that phrase merely mirrors the severity and ill-natured conduct by the Government. Even though these press releases might contain an inkling of truth, they ignore a greater, more dire reality,” she wrote.

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‘Jordan is next’: West Bank annexation signals ‘silent transfer’

Jordan is next after West Bank For decades, the “alternative homeland” – the notion that Jordan should become the Palestinian state – was dismissed in Amman’s diplomatic circles as a distant nightmare or a conspiracy theory.

Today, under the shadow of a far-right Israeli government and a devastating genocidal war in Gaza, that nightmare has become an operational reality.

The alarm in the Hashemite Kingdom reached a fever pitch on Sunday, following the Israeli cabinet’s approval of measures to register vast swaths of the occupied West Bank as “state land” under the Israeli Ministry of Justice. The move, described by Israeli Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich as a “settlement revolution”, effectively bypasses the military administration that has governed the occupied territory since 1967, treating it instead as sovereign Israeli soil.

For Jordan, this bureaucratic annexation is the final signal that the status quo is dead. With the Israeli military’s “Iron Wall” operation crushing refugee camps in Jenin and Tulkarem, Jordan’s political and military establishment is no longer asking if a forced transfer is coming, but how to stop it.

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The Israeli Government Installed and Maintained Security System at Epstein Apartment

Epstein apartmentThe Israeli government installed security equipment and controlled access to a Manhattan apartment building managed by convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, according to a set of emails recently released by the Department of Justice. The equipment was installed starting in early 2016 at 301 E. 66th Street—the residence where former Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak frequently stayed for stretches at a time.

The security operation at “Ehud’s apartment” was in place for at least two years, emails from the DOJ disclosure show, with officials from the Israeli permanent mission to the United Nations corresponding regularly with Epstein’s staff regarding security. The apartment was technically owned by a company connected to Epstein’s brother, Mark Epstein, but was effectively controlled by Jeffrey Epstein. Units in the building were frequently loaned out to Epstein’s contacts and used to house underage models.

Rafi Shlomo, then-director of protective service at the Israeli mission to the United Nations in New York and head of Barak’s security, corresponded with Epstein employees to arrange meetings to discuss security and coordinate installation of specialized surveillance equipment at the 66th Street residence. Shlomo personally controlled access to the apartment for guests and even conducted background checks on cleaners and Epstein’s employees.

Under Israeli law, former prime ministers and other high ranking officials typically receive security services after they leave office. According to the emails, Epstein personally approved the installation of the equipment and authorized meetings between his staff and Israeli security officials.

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Georgian Investigative Journalist Eliso Kiladze Arrested

Eliso KiladzeIn a move that has sent shockwaves through Georgia’s media landscape, Eliso Kiladze, the editor-in-chief of Qronika Plus and Cnews news agancy, was detained by masked special forces on Wednesday morning.

While the government alleges her involvement in a high-stakes fraud ring, Kiladze and her supporters maintain that the arrest is a calculated attempt to suppress explosive investigative findings.

The arrest took place outside Kiladze’s home between 9:00 AM and 10:00 AM on Feb. 18. Despite her high public profile and consistent presence in the media, the authorities opted for a heavy-handed operation involving masked officers from the Investigative Service, according to local outlet Civil Georgia.

The Prosecutor’s Office has charged Kiladze with “membership in an organized criminal group” allegedly led by sanctioned former Prosecutor General Otar Partskhaladze and the Mikadze brothers. The state claims Kiladze was part of a transnational “call center” scheme involving money laundering and fraud.

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Major European allies decline to join first meeting of Trump’s Board of Peace

Board of PeaceDozens of world leaders and national delegations will meet in Washington DC on Thursday for the inaugural meeting of Donald Trump’s Board of Peace, as major European allies declined to join the group and criticised the organisation’s murky funding and political mandate.

The White House has indicated that the summit for his new ad hoc council at the renamed Donald J Trump Institute of Peace will heavily function as a fundraising round, with Trump announcing on social media that countries have pledged more than $5bn toward rebuilding Gaza, which has been devastated in the war with Israel and remains in a humanitarian crisis.

The US president claimed that the member states had also “committed thousands of personnel to the International Stabilization Force and Local Police to maintain Security and Peace for Gazans”.

The board was initially formed with the reconstruction of Gaza as its stated primary goal, though its mandate has since been widened by Trump to include responding to other global conflicts.

But, despite Trump’s characteristic bombast, the Board of Peace summit will open to heMore...avy scepticism, with expectations limited both for Thursday’s meeting in Washington and in the Middle East, where the 100-day peace and recovery plan announced by Jared Kushner in Davos has stalled and aid into Gaza remains at a trickle.

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New York hospital ends transgender treatment program for minors

NYU Langone Health HospitalNYU Langone Health, one of New York City’s major hospital networks, announced this week that it will shut down its gender‑affirming care program for minors, as the Trump administration escalates threats to strip federal funding from providers that treat trans youth.

In a statement to the Guardian, spokesperson Steve Ritea said that “given the recent departure of our medical director, coupled with the current regulatory environment, we made the difficult decision to discontinue our Transgender Youth Health Program.” He added that the hospital’s pediatric mental health services will continue.

The move comes after months of sustained pressure from the administration, including an executive order signed shortly after Trump returned to office declaring that the federal government will not “fund, sponsor, promote, assist, or support the so‑called ‘transition’ of a child from one sex to another”.

NYU Langone reportedly began cancelling appointments for minors soon after the order was issued. New York’s attorney general, Letitia James, directed the hospital to resume care, warning that the network risked violating state anti‑discrimination laws. A federal judge later issued a temporary restraining order blocking the administration’s directive from taking effect.

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