Ice arrests Palestinian green card holder and student protest leader as Trump steps up deportation threats – live

1 day ago

Bukele says he does not plan to release Kilmar Abrego Garcia to the US or within El Salvador

“How can I smuggle a terrorist into the United States? I’m not going to do it,” says Bukele. “I don’t have the power to return him to the United States.”

He adds he wouldn’t release Abrego Garcia into El Salvador either. “I’m not very fond of releasing terrorists into the country,” he says.

Key events

Show key events only

Please turn on JavaScript to use this feature

Goldman Sachs boss says chances of US recession have increased after Trump tariffs

Kalyeena Makortoff

Kalyeena Makortoff

The chief executive of Goldman Sachs, David Solomon, has warned that the chances of a US recession have “increased” in the wake of Donald Trump’s tariffs and that an escalating trade war poses “material risks” for US and global growth.

The Wall Street boss said the growing uncertainty over the fallout of US tariffs could spell trouble for companies and consumers and wreak havoc on the economy.

“We are entering the second quarter with a markedly different operating environment than earlier this year,” he told analysts during an earnings call.

The prospect of a recession has increased, with growing indications that economic activity is slowing down around the world.

The growing uncertainty had made it hard for Goldman clients to make important business decisions, he added.

This uncertainty around the path forward, and fears over the potentially escalating effects of a trade war, have created material risks to the US and global economy.

Solomon’s warning came despite a temporary roll-back by Trump, who declared a 90-day pause on higher-band tariffs for countries outside China last week. The US president also announced plans to exclude some electronic products from steep reciprocal tariffs on Chinese goods.

Solomon said he was “encouraged by the US administration’s recent actions to pursue a more gradual policy process that allows for considered negotiations with many countries” but warned markets would continue to be volatile given that “how policy will evolve is still unknown”.

Ice arrests Palestinian green card holder and student protest leader from Columbia University

Another leader of Columbia University’s campus protest movement against Israel’s war in Gaza has been arrested by US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (Ice), The Intercept reports.

Palestinian student and green card holder Mohsen Mahdawi has been in the US for the last ten years and was one of the leaders of the pro-Palestine student protest movement until spring 2024.

In a statement to The Intercept, Mahdawi’s attorney Luna Droubi said:

Mohsen Mahdawi was unlawfully detained today for no reason other than his Palestinian identity. He came to this country hoping to be free to speak out about the atrocities he has witnessed, only to be punished for such speech.”

Mahdawi’s lawyers filed a habeas corpus petition on Monday morning challenging the legality of his detention, alleging the government was violating his statutory and due process rights by punishing him for speech related to Palestine and Israel.

The filing said it appears that Mahdawi was facing deportation under the obscure provision used in other recent cases that gives secretary of state Marco Rubio the right to unilaterally declare immigrants as threats to US foreign policy.

The Intercept reports that Mahdawi sheltered in place for three weeks for fear of being arrested by Ice agents, as his friend and fellow Columbia activist Mahmoud Khalil has been.

When he attended an appointment for his US citizenship interview at the Colchester USCIS office, authorities took him into custody. He now faces an order to deport him to the occupied West Bank.

“It’s kind of a death sentence,” Mahdawi said in reference to escalating attacks by the Israeli military and settlers on Palestinians living there. “Because my people are being killed unjustly in an indiscriminate way.”

Mahdawi’s case is the latest in a string of Ice arrests instigated by the Trump administration targeting pro-Palestinian students and scholars present in the US on visas or green cards.

“This is the outcome,” Mahdawi told The Intercept. “I will be either living or imprisoned or killed by the apartheid system.”

Homeland security secretary Kristi Noem has said she expects more people will be sent to El Salvador.

Noem, speaking to Fox News on Monday ahead of Donald Trump’s meeting with the president of El Salvador, Nayib Bukele, said:

When I was in El Salvador visiting with President Bukele, we talked about the fact that he would accept more flights, would accept more individuals into Cecot. So I’m looking forward to that partnership continuing.

Chris Stein

Chris Stein

Democratic senator Chris Van Hollen of Maryland will travel to El Salvador this week to visit his constituent Kilmar Armando Abrego Garcia if he is not released from detention and returned to the United States.

Van Hollen also requested that El Salvador’s president, Nayib Bukele, meet with him during his visit to Washington DC to discuss Abrego Garcia’s return.

“Kilmar Armando Abrego Garcia never should have been abducted and illegally deported, and the courts have made clear: the administration must bring him home, now. However, since the Trump Administration appears to be ignoring these court mandates, we need to take additional action,” Van Hollen said in a statement.

That’s why I’ve requested to meet with President Bukele during his trip to the United States, and – if Kilmar is not home by midweek – I plan to travel to El Salvador this week to check on his condition and discuss his release.

When he met Donald Trump in the Oval Office earlier today, Bukele said he would not return Abrego Garcia to the United States or release him from prison in El Salvador.

Andrew Roth

Andrew Roth

Republican supporters of Ukraine are using the Kremlin’s deadly missile strikes as their latest evidence to convince Donald Trump that he must increase pressure on Vladimir Putin if he wants to reach a ceasefire deal.

Pro-Ukraine lawmakers and aides in the Republican party have carefully navigated Trump’s apparent affinity for Putin and avoided direct intervention in their efforts to shift his support toward Kyiv. But following the Russian strikes during Palm Sunday celebrations in the city of Sumy, advisers and allies have been highly vocal in condemning the attack using language meant to resonate with the US president’s conservative, religious base.

“Putin and peace apparently do not fit in the same sentence,” wrote Lindsey Graham, the Trump-allied senator who has sought to balance his support for Ukraine with his desire to remain on Trump’s good side.

Russia’s barbaric Palm Sunday attack on Christian worshippers in Ukraine seems to be Putin’s answer to efforts to achieve a ceasefire and peace.

Russia's President Vladimir Putin shakes hands with US President Donald Trump's envoy Steve Witkoff during a meeting in Saint Petersburg on 11 April 2025.
Russia's President Vladimir Putin shakes hands with US President Donald Trump's envoy Steve Witkoff during a meeting in Saint Petersburg on 11 April 2025. Photograph: Gavriil Grigorov/AFP/Getty Images

The strike came less than 48 hours after Steve Witkoff, the Trump envoy, met with Putin in St Petersburg. The Kremlin called the meeting “extremely useful and very effective”, although there was no indication that the two men achieved concrete results. Witkoff’s gesture of holding has hand over his heart when he saw Putin has been criticised in Washington as excessively fawning and naive.

Joe Biden has condemned the arson attack on Pennsylvania governor Josh Shapiro’s home on Sunday, saying he was “disgusted” by the fire that left significant damage and forced Shapiro, his family and guests to evacuate the building during the Jewish holiday of Passover.

“We are relieved that they are safe and grateful to the first responders,” the former president posted to X on Monday.

There is no place for this type of evil in America, and as I told the Governor yesterday, we must stand united against hatred and violence.

Donald Trump, speaking to reporters from the Oval Office just earlier, also condemned the attack.

Asked about the suspect, Cody Balmer, Trump said he was “probably a wack job” and “not a fan” of his. “A thing like that cannot be allowed to happen,” he added.

That’s it, the press briefing is over.

Trump reaffirms that he's 'all for' deporting naturalized US citizens who commit violent crimes to El Salvador

Asked if he’s open to deporting naturalized US citizens to El Salvador, Trump says yes, “if they’re criminals”.

That includes them, they’re as bad as anybody. I’m all for it.

He adds the US can do it via El Salvador “for less money and have great security”.

There are “others” the administration is negotiating with too, Trump adds.

Trump repeats threat to strike Iran militarily if it doesn't give up nuclear programme

Trump says Iran must abandon any drive for a nuclear weapon or face harsh consequences that could include a military strike on Tehran’s nuclear facilities.

“Of course it does,” Trump said when asked if a potential response could include strikes on Iranian nuclear facilities.

Trump says he expects to impose tariffs on imported pharmaceuticals “in the not-too-distant future”.

Trump says he plans to deport 'as many people as possible' who are in the US 'illegally'

Asked how many “illegal criminals” he will export from the US, Trump says he will deport “as many as possible”.

Referring to El Salvador’s notorious Cecot prison, where the deported people have been sent, Trump says he asked Bukele if he could build more of them. He suggests he would be open to helping El Salvador financially to do so.

“The foreign policy of the United States is conducted by the president of the United States, not by a court. And no court in the United States has a right to conduct the foreign policy of the United States,” Marco Rubio adds.

Read Full Article at Source