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First: Trump Administration revokes Harvard's ability to record international students | US messages

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The Trump administration has the ability of Harvard University to register, revoke international students and lose current foreign Harvard students for transmission or losing to transmit or lose their legal status, causing shock waves through the academy.

After the correspondence, the Trump administration informed Harvard about the “legality of a extensive order” – part of a state investigation in which federal officials threaten the university's international students.

The Minister of Homeland Protection Kristi Noem said that her department had “failed to meet the reports about Harvard” and added that the Trump government “would have an impact on the government's evils of anti-Americanism and anti-Semitism in society and campus on campus on campus on the latest government.

Trump tries to end fundamental rights for child immigrants in custody

Imprisoned children stand up in a residential center in Karnes City, Texas. Photo: Eric Gay/AP

The Trump administration urges to abolish a requirement that provides for the responsibility of the US government for providing fundamental rights and protection for child immigrants in their care.

The protection, which comes from a declaration of consent from 1997 called Flores comparison agreement, limits the duration that children can hold from immigration authorities, and requires the government to provide adequate food, water and clean clothing from the government.

The attempt by the administration to end this protection reflects Trump's earlier efforts during his first term, even though the application was depressed.

  • What is the argument of the Ministry of Justice? In a court application on Thursday, the Flores agreement argued “completely”, and claimed that it had encouraged unauthorized border crossings and held the government from “effectively” deporting immigrant families. Right groups called it “incomprehensible”.

Trump's evidence of South Africa 'Weißer Generic Murder' contains pictures of DRC

South African President Cyril Ramaphosa is confronted by Donald Trump with supposed evidence of the genocide. Photo: Jim Lo Scalzo/Upi/Shutterstock

The evidence presented by Donald Trump to South African President Cyril Ramaphosa to support his wrong claims of a “white genocide” that allegedly appeared in his nation, included pictures from the Democratic Republic of the Congo.

Instead of presenting dead Africans in South Africa, the pictures show humanitarian workers who wear corpse bags in the Congolese city of Goma after fighting M23 rebels supported against Rwanda.

In addition to photos taken in another country, Trump showed Ramaphosa film material, of which he claimed that he represents the “graves” of more than a thousand white farmers. However, it soon turned out that this was also inaccurate, as it turned out that after the murder of two African farmers, it was built up a temporary memorial.

  • What is the context for Trump's claims? While the murder and violent crime rates in South Africa are high, the idea of ​​a genocide against white South Africans is a right-wing extremist conspiracy theory: the majority of the victims are black, as Ramaphosa emphasized.

In other news …

Benjamin Netanyahu said the comments from Starrer, Macron and Carney were not “peace”. Photo: Ronen Zvulun/AP
  • Israel has accused Canada, Great Britain and France the “encouragement of Hamas”, After the leaders of the state of Israel asked to stop his military offensive and enable humanitarian aid to enter the Gaza.

  • Venezuela's decision to prevent elections to select civil servants to conduct an area internationally recognizedZed Guyanese Territory If an attack on the sovereignty of the country is, Guyana's president warned.

  • Columbia graduate and imprisoned Palestinian activists Mahmoud Khalil was finally allowed to hold his baby For the first time, a month after his birth.

Status of the day: Number of people distributed internally hits a record of 83.4 m

From left to right: Rosmira Campos, Baby Begum and Mubarak Ibrahim. Photo: Thaslima Begum/The Guardian

Conf. Three internally displaced people in Bangladesh, Sudan and Colombia explain how floods, civil war and clashes between military and paramilitary groups have forced them to flee from their houses. “Locals don't want to be here … We don't want to be here either – but we have no choice,” said a woman with four children who live in a tent in a Bogotá park.

Do not miss this: fear, hope, and dislike in Elon Musk's new city

A bust of Elon Musk near his Starbase facility in Brownsville, Texas, was exposed. Photo: Gabriel Cardenas/AFP/Getty Images

In Cameron County, at the southern tip of Texas, the richest man in the world has built the home of his mission to save humanity and colonize Mars with a bronze bust in his own picture. But as 280 inhabitants – most employed by musk, which are prepared for whether they were divided as a new community, which are to be divided near Muschus.

A growing number of lawyers use the courts to take governments around the world. Photo: Minden Pictures/Alamy

Prosecuting Polluters Over Climate Harms is notorously Tricky – A Huge Number of Actors Are Behind Emissions, Making It Hard to Establish Legal Responsibility, and the Worst Harms Are Often Not Experience In The Same Country That The Emissions Are Produced in. But in Recent Years, Judges Have woken up to the existential threat of the climate emergency and have begun to allow the interpretation of human rights law to shift to accommodate that. Samira Shackle speaks to some of the pioneers of this change and asks how the effects could affect.

Last thing: WTF? Americans and British swear more than Australians online

Researchers say that Australians swear less than potty mouth poms and vulgar Americans. Composite: Victoria Hart/Getty Images

The Americans come first and in second place when it comes to how often they swear online while the Australians are in third place, has found important new research results. But while people from the United States and Great Britain are ahead of us with regard to the mere volume of the curse words used, the Australians used rather unusual and unique cows, and the researchers noticed that the vulgar language is a “natural playground” to unleash “linguistic creativity”.

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