Tag: deportation

  • Jeff Sessions, testifying at trial of hip hop artist, details high-level deportation discussions

    Jeff Sessions, testifying at trial of hip hop artist, details high-level deportation discussions

    [ad_1]

    Prosecutors contend that Michel — who became famous in the 1990s as a member of the Fugees trio — engaged in the international intrigue behind the charges after running short on cash from his music. They say he received $88 million between 2012 and 2017 from Jho Low, a Malaysian businessperson suspected of looting that country’s 1MDB sovereign wealth fund.

    Michel’s defense team has argued that he wasn’t acting as an agent for Low or China in his effort to arrange the swap, but acting for humanitarian reasons to aid American citizens and residents who were in distress.

    Under questioning by Michel’s attorney David Kenner, Sessions told jurors about a pair of high-level meetings where officials discussed the potential deportation of Guo, who eventually became a close associate of Trump adviser Steve Bannon.

    “I remember there was a meeting at the State Department. I believe Homeland Security and the Department of Justice were there – in their conference room,” the former attorney general said.

    Sessions also detailed efforts by a Chinese vice minister for public security, Sun Lijun, to arrange a meeting with him to discuss the possibility of deporting Guo. Prosecutors have alleged that Sun was Michel’s contact in the Chinese government and the person urging Michel to try to broker a deal.

    “I’m aware that we had a request from the [Chinese] ambassador to meet … that I join and meet with Mr. Sun,” Sessions said.

    However, Sessions said he ultimately declined to meet with the Chinese security official. He also said the proposal to deport Guo never proceeded on his watch. Guo was not deported, but he was indicted and arrested last month on charges he perpetrated a billion-dollar fraud scheme. He has pleaded not guilty.

    The 76-year-old former attorney general and senator, who spent more than 12 years as U.S. attorney in Alabama and was an unsuccessful nominee for the federal bench during the Reagan administration, was not able to shed much light on Michel’s activities.

    “I don’t recall ever having met him,” Sessions said after Michel stood and removed his face mask.

    Prosecutors have argued that Michel used various intermediaries, including a DOJ lawyer named George Higginbotham and Republican fundraiser Elliott Broidy, to try to advance the swap and to try to shut down the Justice Department’s investigation into Low’s role in 1MDB.

    The key point Kenner appeared to gain during Sessions’ brief tour on the stand Tuesday was the former attorney general’s observation that there was nothing obviously improper about approaching the attorney general’s office or the Justice Department to seek deportation of someone wanted in a foreign country.

    “I think that’s an appropriate action, although the State Department would have an important role to play in that and others, perhaps Homeland Security, since this figure was important to China,” Sessions said.

    Sessions also testified that he was aware of efforts to get some U.S. citizens out of China, including a pregnant woman who was being denied an exit visa. “We felt she was being improperly detained,” he said.

    Prosecutors passed up their chance to cross-examine their former boss. “No questions,” prosecutor Sean Mulryne said.

    The trial of Michel, 50, is in its fourth week. The defense kicked off its case on Monday with an opening statement deferred from the outset of the trial. Kenner told jurors in detail about Michel’s history as a successful performer, emphasized that any lobbying his client did was legal and insisted he had no knowledge that he might be required to register as a foreign agent, NBC News reported.

    [ad_2]
    #Jeff #Sessions #testifying #trial #hip #hop #artist #details #highlevel #deportation #discussions
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Tunisia denies deportation of immigrants from sub-Saharan nations by force

    Tunisia denies deportation of immigrants from sub-Saharan nations by force

    [ad_1]

    Tunis: Tunisia denied that it had deported immigrants from sub-Saharan African countries by force, according to a statement released by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

    “Following allegations concerning the forced deportation of a number of immigrants from the brotherly sub-Saharan African countries, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs confirms that none of the citizens from those diaspora has been expelled by force,” Xinhua news agency quoted the statement as saying.

    The Ministry said “some requests for the voluntary return of illegal residents in Tunisia to their countries have been registered”, adding that applications are examined in full compliance with the legal procedures.

    It stressed that foreign nationals have equal access to protection in Tunisia and there was no discrimination.

    During a meeting of the Superior Council for National Security on February 21, President Kais Saied spoke of the illegal immigration of people from sub-Saharan African countries to Tunisia and the means to deal with it.

    Saied considered the current situation “not normal”, calling for an end to this phenomenon.

    Subscribe us on The Siasat Daily - Google News

    [ad_2]
    #Tunisia #denies #deportation #immigrants #subSaharan #nations #force

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Indian-origin teen girl missing in US fearing family’s deportation amid layoffs

    Indian-origin teen girl missing in US fearing family’s deportation amid layoffs

    [ad_1]

    New York: An Indian-American teenager Tanvi Marupally has gone missing in the US and according to the local police, she ran away from home due to fear of her family being deported amid mass layoffs in the tech industry.

    The incident happened in the US state of Arkansas and the community and Conway Police Department “continue to search for a missing 14-year-old girl and now there’s a reward for whoever can find her,” reports kark.com.

    Marupally was last seen on January 17 near Conway Junior High School heading north on Davis Street.

    According to the report, she was wearing a purple coat, pink pullover, blue shirt and blue jeans.

    “Police said they believe one of the possible reasons why Tanvi ran away was a fear of her family being deported,” the report mentioned.

    Tanvi’s father informed the Conway police department that acehe is no longer at risk of losing his job and that leaving the country is not a concern at this time”.

    Charlie Crossman who owns Crossman Printing said he has made over one thousand fliers in the hopes of helping spread the word about Marupally.

    “I hope just to get the word out there’s people I talk to about Tanvi and they don’t know about her. They live on Conway,” Crossman was quoted as saying.

    Crossman spoke with Marupally’s parents when they came to his printing shop for assistance.

    “They came in and I guess they had heard we were giving away flyers for people that wanted to hand them out and we helped them also go to a mailer,” Crossman added.

    Marupally’s family is offering a $5,000 reward in hopes of bringing her home.

    The news comes as thousands of Indian-origin tech employees on H1-B visa have lost jobs and have 60 days to find a new one, else leave the country.

    [ad_2]
    #Indianorigin #teen #girl #missing #fearing #familys #deportation #layoffs

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Biden grants Hong Kongers in the U.S. a 2-year deportation reprieve

    Biden grants Hong Kongers in the U.S. a 2-year deportation reprieve

    [ad_1]

    biden classified documents strategy 78023

    The White House has also expanded the number of people who may benefit from DED by allowing any Hong Kong residents present in the U.S. today, Jan. 26, to apply for the program.

    “With this action, we are demonstrating again President Biden’s strong support for the people of Hong Kong in the face of increasing repression by the PRC,” the National Security Council said in a statement.

    U.S.-based pro-democracy activists who have been lobbying the White House for months to extend DED welcomed the White House decision. Hong Kongers in the U.S. “can breathe a sigh of relief,” said Samuel Chu, president of the nonprofit The Campaign for Hong Kong. The expanded eligibility criteria means that “even more lives will be preserved and protected from persecution, rigged trials, long jail sentences, and loss of freedom,” Chu said.

    The Chinese government has bristled at the deportation protection provided to Hong Kong residents in the U.S.

    “The U.S. provided so-called ‘safe haven’ for anti-China insurgents fleeing overseas under the pretext of democracy and human rights, further exposing its sinister intention to jeopardize the peace of Hong Kong and to use the ‘Hong Kong card’ to contain China’s development,” Chinese embassy spokesperson Liu Pengyu said in a statement earlier this month.

    The Biden administration first issued the deportation reprieve in August 2021, due to concerns about “the significant erosion” of rights and freedoms in Hong Kong. It granted an estimated 3,860 Hong Kong citizens present in the U.S. on that date the right to live and work in the U.S. for 18 months.

    But repression in the territory has worsened during that time as government authorities have launched a prolonged crackdown to silence democracy activists and muzzle media. Police enforcement of the National Security Law, which imposes severe penalties for ambiguously defined crimes including “subversion” and “collusion with foreign countries” has led to the arrests of more than 160 people since June 2020 for crimes including organizing informal public opinion polls. Lawyers who represent victims of human rights abuses are fleeing the territory in the face of threats and intimidation.

    The NSC said in its statement that Beijing is using the National Security Law to “deny the people of Hong Kong their human rights and fundamental freedoms, undermine Hong Kong’s autonomy, and chip away at Hong Kong’s remaining democratic processes and institutions.”

    House Foreign Affairs Committee Ranking Member Gregory Meeks (D-N.Y.) urged the White House earlier this month to “take immediate steps” to extend the program. Sens. Jeff Merkley (D-Ore.), Tim Kaine (D-Va.) and Rep. Jim McGovern (D-Mass.) called for a DED extension of “another 18 months at a minimum,” in a letter last week.

    Hong Kong pro-democracy activists are seeking congressional support to grant Temporary Protected Status to Hong Kongers to eliminate the uncertainty of DED extensions.

    Renewing DED is “the bare minimum,” said Anna Kwok, executive director of the nonprofit Hong Kong Democracy Council. It “resets a countdown clock for Hong Kongers in the U.S. until the next wave of uncertainty and anxiety inevitably hits.”

    [ad_2]
    #Biden #grants #Hong #Kongers #U.S #2year #deportation #reprieve
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )