U.S. says it will deport Kilmar Abrego Garcia to Eswatini because he fears deportation to UgandaNew Foto - U.S. says it will deport Kilmar Abrego Garcia to Eswatini because he fears deportation to Uganda

Attorneys for Immigration and Customs Enforcement said in a Friday letter that they intend to sendKilmar Abrego Garciato theAfrican nation of Eswatiniafter he expressed a fear ofdeportation to Uganda. The letter from ICE to Abrego Garcia's attorneys was earlier reported byFox News. It states that his fear of persecution or torture in Uganda is "hard to take seriously, especially given that you have claimed (through your attorneys) that you fear persecution or torture in at least 22 different countries. ...Nonetheless, we hereby notify you that your new country of removal is Eswatini." Eswatini's government spokesperson told The Associated Press on Saturday that it had no received no communication regarding Abrego Garcia's transfer there. TheSalvadoran manlived in Maryland for more than a decade before he was mistakenly deported to El Salvador earlier this year. That set off a series of contentious court battles that have turned his case into a test of the limits of PresidentDonald Trump'shardline immigration policies. Although Abrego Garcia immigrated to the U.S. illegally around the year 2011, when he was a teenager, he has an American wife and child. A 2019 immigration court order barred his deportation to his native El Salvador, finding he had a credible fear of threats from gangs there. He was deported anyway in March — in what a government attorney said was anadministrative error— and held in the country's notoriousTerrorism Confinement Center. Facing acourt order, the Trump administrationreturned him to the U.S.in June only to charge him withhuman smugglingbased on a 2022 traffic stop in Tennessee. While thatcourt caseis ongoing, ICE nowseeks to deport him again. For his part, Abrego Garcia isrequesting asylumin the United States. He was denied asylum in 2019 because his request came more than a year after he arrived in the U.S., his attorney Simon Sandoval-Mosenberg has said. Since he was deported and has now re-entered the U.S., the attorney said he is now eligible for asylum. "If Mr. Abrego Garcia is allowed a fair trial in immigration court, there's no way he's not going to prevail on his claim," he said in an emailed statement. As part of his asylum claim, Abrego Garcia expressed a fear ofdeportation to Ugandaand "nearly two dozen" other countries, according anICE court filingin opposition to reopening his asylum case. That Thursday filing also states that if the case is reopened, the 2019 order barring his deportation to El Salvador would become void and the government would pursue his removal to that country.

U.S. says it will deport Kilmar Abrego Garcia to Eswatini because he fears deportation to Uganda

U.S. says it will deport Kilmar Abrego Garcia to Eswatini because he fears deportation to Uganda Attorneys for Immigration and Customs Enfor...
'We are in critical minutes': Gaza City assault spurs widespread Israeli protests amid fear for hostagesNew Foto - 'We are in critical minutes': Gaza City assault spurs widespread Israeli protests amid fear for hostages

As the Israeli military expands its assault on Gaza City, Israeli demonstrators took to the streets Saturday evening, driven by a new sense of urgency to demand the government halt the operation and prioritize a ceasefire deal. Over the weekend, the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) escalated its offensive, striking two high-rise buildings in Gaza City, only to amplify fears and heighten concerns among hostage families that ongoing operations could endanger their relatives after more than 700 days in captivity. In a social media post with video of one of the strikes on Saturday, Defense Minister Israel Katz said, "We continue," showing the government's clear intent to keep pounding Gaza City. Hours later, the protests began. Alongside the weekly demonstrations in Tel Aviv, another group protested in Jerusalem outside the Prime Minister's residence, the culmination of four days of targeted pressure on Benjamin Netanyahu and his government. "We are in critical minutes," said Viki Cohen, mother of the hostage Nimrod Cohen, addressing the Jerusalem crowd. "It is possible that at this very moment the fate of my son is being decided." The protests appeared to intensify following a 48-hour period that underscored the hostages' precarious situation. On Friday, as the Gaza war reached its 700th day, Hamas released new propaganda footage of two hostages – Guy Gilboa-Dalal and Alon Ohel – being driven through Gaza City. The video marked the first appearance of 24-year-old Ohel since his capture by Hamas during the October 7, 2023, attack on Israel. Hours later, US President Donald Trump told White House reporters that some of the 20 hostages presumed alive in Gaza may have "recently died," repeating similar comments from last month suggesting "probably" fewer than 20 of the remaining hostages were still alive. Israel's official hostage tally has not changed, with 48 remaining in Gaza, 20 of whom are believed to be alive. But Trump's statements reinforced the families' fears that the escalating offensive risks their loved ones. On Friday, some of the hostage families said they were briefed by Israeli military officials that the operation could risk the captives' lives. "The conquest of Gaza poses a clear and imminent danger to the hostage," said Orna Neutra, mother of deceased hostage Omer Neutra, in a speech at the protests over the weekend. Afterward, she told CNN, "The IDF Chief of Staff and the different heads of the military and intelligence have said that there's no way they can really protect the hostages. We also know from past experiences that they don't know exactly where they are." Neutra referenced an incident in Rafah one year ago when Hamas murdered six hostages as Israeli forces drew close. "Despite hoping to proceed slowly without harming the hostages, some things remain beyond their control," Neutra said of the IDF's plans. Since the security cabinet initially approved the war's expansion in early August, hostage families have broadened their protest campaign to pressure the government to pursue a deal. Organizers report hundreds of thousands of Israelis have participated in the weekly demonstrations. The wide-scale protests reached the White House, as Trump acknowledged on Friday. "The big protests in Israel about the hostages put Israel in a tough position. I've never seen anything like it, the level of love they have for their children," he told reporters. However, the massive turnout has not convinced Netanyahu to advance the latest hostage deal on the table. Last month, Hamas accepted a Qatari-Egyptian proposal for a phased agreement releasing 10 living hostages and 18 deceased hostages during a 60-day ceasefire. Israel has ignored and dismissed the offer, with Netanyahu now demanding only a comprehensive agreement to end the war on Israel's maximalist conditions, including all hostages released and Hamas disarmament. On Saturday evening, Hamas reiterated "its commitment and adherence to the agreement" and said it was willing to consider any proposal that ends the war. Trump has repeatedly endorsed Netanyahu's new negotiation strategy, threatening Hamas once again. "If you don't let (the hostages) all out, it's going to be a tough situation. It's going to be nasty." Yet he also stated the US is in "very deep negotiations" with Hamas, raising hostage families' hopes that a deal could be in the making. In Tel Aviv's central hostage square, a wide banner addressed the president directly: "Trump - save the hostages now." For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

‘We are in critical minutes’: Gaza City assault spurs widespread Israeli protests amid fear for hostages

'We are in critical minutes': Gaza City assault spurs widespread Israeli protests amid fear for hostages As the Israeli military exp...
Aziz Ansari breaks down in tears thanking his wife at "Good Fortune" premiere with Keanu Reeves: 'This is so embarrassing'

Aziz Ansari's feature directorial debutGood FortunestarsKeanu Reevesas a fictional angel watching over a struggling gig worker, but judging by his emotional speech at the film's world premiere, theParks and Recreationalum might've found his own angel on Earth in his wife, Serena Skov Campbell. The writer-director-star and Reeves introduced theSeth Rogen-starring film Saturday night at the 2025Toronto International Film Festival. Ansari then broke down in tears while telling the audience about his wife's support as he worked to bring the comedy to the big screen. (See video above.) "I also want to thank my wonderful wife Serena who, uh, I'm sorry," Ansari said, fighting back tears before he called her "so wonderful" to the sound of applause from the crowd at the city's Roy Thomson Hall. Arturo Holmes/Getty Ansari continued, adding that his wife "read the script before Seth or anybody, and would sit next to me in bed and read scenes with me," before he lowered his head to his hands and cried. "This is so bad. This is so embarrassing. This is so bad," the 42-year-old said, before composing himself and continuing with his introduction while Reeves stood behind him. "But, she's so wonderful. You make a movie like this or any movie, a lot of times you're away from home, and I was gone a lot for this," Ansari remembered. "We had to stop for the strike, I had to prep the movie twice, so I was away from home a lot. I got her some jewelry the other day and she's not mad. She'll probably be mad because of what I just said!" Ansari married Campbell in 2022. She works as a forensic data scientist, according to aPage Sixreport from their wedding in Italy. The couple first met in 2018, and were first photographed together in September of that year, according to the outlet. Good Fortunemarks Ansari's feature directorial debut, following the shelving of his prior attempt at a first-time directing gig. Production on the star's prior film,Being Mortal, was suspended bySearchlight Pictures in 2022after a staffer filed a complaint against actorBill Murray, alleging inappropriate behavior. Murray eventually addressed the allegationsbut didn't go into further detail about the staffer's complaint. "I did something I thought was funny, and it wasn't taken that way," the actor told CNBC at the time. "The company, the movie studio, wanted to do the right thing, so they wanted to check it all out, investigate it, and so they stopped the production." "But as of now, we're talking and we're trying to make peace with each other," he added. "We're both professionals. We like each other's work… and if you can't really get along and trust each other, there's no point in going further working together or making a movie as well." Eddy Chen/Lionsgate Back in 2018, Ansari landed in some hot water himself when an anonymous accuser publicly alleged that a date with theMaster of Nonestat left her feeling "violated" and "pressured" to engage in sexual activity with him. The comedian maintained at the time that it was "completely consensual" and that he was "surprised and concerned" to learn in a text message the next day that the woman "felt uncomfortable" with the alleged actions. Ansari was criticized for not offering a public apology, though the comedian recently toldThe Hollywood Reporterthat he "apologized to the person personally" when the allegation was made public. Want more movie news? Sign up forEntertainment Weekly's free newsletterto get the latest trailers, celebrity interviews, film reviews, and more. Good Fortunefollows Reeves as an angel, Gabriel, tasked by his boss, Martha (Sandra Oh), with stopping humans from dying while texting and driving. He then becomes engrossed in the daily life of a houseless gig worker, Arj (Ansari), who takes on an exciting prospect as the assistant to a wealthy tech bro, Jeff (Rogen), while juggling a budding romance with a former colleague (Keke Palmer). Gabriel then meddles in their lives, soul-swapping Jeff and Arj's lives so each has a chance to live the other's experience. The film will be released theatrically Oct. 17 via Lionsgate. Watch Ansari break down in tears over his wife in the video at the top of this post. Read the original article onEntertainment Weekly

Aziz Ansari breaks down in tears thanking his wife at “Good Fortune” premiere with Keanu Reeves: 'This is so embarrassing'

Aziz Ansari breaks down in tears thanking his wife at "Good Fortune" premiere with Keanu Reeves: 'This is so embarrassing'...
Prince Harry back in UK, but will he see his father King Charles?New Foto - Prince Harry back in UK, but will he see his father King Charles?

By Michael Holden LONDON (Reuters) -Prince Harry returns to Britain this week amid speculation that he might visit his father, King Charles, for the first time in about 20 months in tentative steps towards a family reconciliation. On Monday, which also happens to be the third anniversary of the death of his grandmother, Queen Elizabeth, Harry will attend the WellChild Awards, an annual charity event for seriously ill children for which he is a longtime supporter and one of the rare events which bring him back to Britain. The visit has left media and royal commentators postulating that it will provide an opportunity for the 76-year-old monarch and his son to see each other and start healing their high-profile rift. "There is talk, growing talk, that he might well meet up with his father," said Simon Perry, who covers the royal family in London for People magazine. "I think with any time Prince Harry comes close or relatively close to his father, and they can be in the same country, there's going to be talk that they might well get together." Buckingham Palace says it never discusses private family matters, while Harry's spokesperson likewise declined to comment. The prince, 40, who last saw his father in February last year shortly after Buckingham Palace revealed the king was undergoing treatment for cancer, has been estranged not just from Charles but the rest of the Windsors since he and his wife Meghan left royal duties in 2020 and moved to California. SEEKING RAPPROCHEMENT Since then, in interviews, TV documentaries and his autobiography "Spare", the couple have been critical of the royal household with Harry delivering particularly barbed comments about his father and elder brother, heir Prince William. In an emotional interview in May, after he lost a legal battle with the British government over his security, Harry, the Duke of Sussex, told the BBC he wanted a rapprochement. "Of course some members my family will never forgive me for writing a book. Of course they will never forgive me for lots of things. But you know ... I would love reconciliation with my family ... there's no point in continuing to fight anymore. And life is precious," he said. "I don't know how much longer my father has. He won't speak to me because of this security stuff, but it would be nice to reconcile." In July, the king's communications chief and Harry's media representatives were pictured at a secret meeting in London in what newspapers suggested might be the first steps towards a reconciliation. "I think it's important for the image of the monarchy that the king and his younger son are seen to be on speaking terms," historian and author Anthony Seldon told Reuters. "I also think it's very important for both of them ... the king is the king, but he's also a human being and a loving father." Harry is not expected to see William, with newspapers saying the Prince of Wales was not yet ready to bury the hatchet with his brother. (Reporting by Michael Holden and Marie-Louise Gumuchian; Editing by Sharon Singleton)

Prince Harry back in UK, but will he see his father King Charles?

Prince Harry back in UK, but will he see his father King Charles? By Michael Holden LONDON (Reuters) -Prince Harry returns to Britain this ...
Freeze! Police ice cream trucks seek to portray officers in a positive lightNew Foto - Freeze! Police ice cream trucks seek to portray officers in a positive light

NORWICH, Conn. (AP) — The puns are plentiful as police departments around the country buy their own ice cream trucks and roll into neighborhoods to hand out frozen treats for free. "Copsicle Patrol" is written on the one in Danbury, Connecticut. "Freeze! You have the right to remain frozen," says another in Pittsfield, Massachusetts. "Let's Chill Together," Cleveland's proclaims. "Frosty Five-O. Get the inside scoop" declares one in Palm Bay, Florida. "To Protect and Soft Serve," says yet another in Toldedo, Ohio. Whimsical slogans aside, a growing number of local law enforcement outfits are using the trucks for a serious mission: to have positive interactions with their communities at a time when headlines often feature police brutality and misconduct. "There is no better way to draw the community to approach the police and let them know that we are approachable, we're humans as well, than by handing out free ice cream to the kids," said Lt. Kyle Besse of the Norwich, Connecticut, police department. "The smiles on the kids' faces are really what make you realize that this is a great community outreach service." Norwich police's all-electric Chevy BrightDrop van debuted in early August, with about 90% of the $43,000 cost coming from donations from area businesses and contributors, and the rest from the city. Some departments have used tax revenue from legal marijuana sales and property seizures to fund their ice cream operations. 'Seeing kids be happy' On a recent day, Norwich's van stopped at a local school where children were participating in sports camps. It was a hit as officers handed out ice cream sandwiches, bubble gum-flavored pops and Italian ices. "Instead of seeing people in jail, they're seeing kids be happy," said 11-year-old Rozzy Constant, who opted for the bubble gum pop. The truck later rolled into an apartment complex. In a police cruiser accompanying the truck, Besse used his phone to play ice cream truck songs through the exterior loudspeaker. The department is now raising money to outfit the truck with its own sound system and police lights. Angela Pires heard the music and rushed out with her grandchildren. "It's a great idea. Not everybody can afford it," she said. "Police get a lot of bad publicity. It's about time that they get good things said about them." Marijuana tax and property seizures fund some programs Like Norwich, many departments' ice cream truck programs are funded by donations, and the treats they hand out for free are often provided to them at no charge by local businesses like grocery stores and ice cream shops. Norwich police list 20 sponsors on their truck. In Danbury, Connecticut, police used tax revenue from the city's legal marijuana dispensaries to pay for their truck, which hit the streets in July and was the first one in the state. In Chicopee, Massachusetts, police paid for theirs with assets seized during criminal arrests. That practice, calledcivil forfeiture, has been criticized by criminal justice advocacy groups because state and local laws allow law enforcement to take property from someone suspected of criminal activity and keep it even if criminal charges are never filed. And some departments have used federal law enforcement grants to help fund the projects. Paul Poirier, the police chief in Barnstead, New Hampshire, used his own money to buy an old ice cream truck that he refurbished with a friend and donated to his department a couple years ago. Today, he runs a business named Copsicle Ice Cream Trucks in his spare time that restores and repairs ice cream vehicles to sell to police departments starting at around $37,000. "I figured, you know what, this would be a great opportunity for the kids and families to get free ice cream and make those connections and see the police in a more positive light," said Poirier, who said he's been fielding calls from police departments as far away as California showing interest in the trucks. Boston police hand out ice cream for 15 years Boston police are widely credited with having the first official police ice cream truck in the U.S. In partnership with the HP Hood ice cream company, whose half vanilla and half chocolate ice cream cups are iconic in New England, the city began "Operation Hoodsie Cup" in 2010. Police in other parts of the country, including St. Louis, Miami and Milwaukee, would deploy their own ice cream trucks in the following years. Over the past 15 years, Hood has donated all the ice cream for Boston's truck, which goes to more than 400 events in city neighborhoods each year, police said. Its current truck was donated by the nonprofit Boston Police Foundation in 2016. "Each interaction is an opportunity for our officers to build trust with community, and to make some smiles in the process," said Boston Police Commissioner Michael Cox said in a statement. The ice cream trucks are another program in a long line of community policing initiatives that many departments have put in place over the years, such as "Coffee with a Cop" and youth sports programs. Whether the trucks are actually improving the public's opinion of police over the long term isn't clear due to a lack of research on the subject, said Kenneth Quick, an adjunct professor at John Jay College of Criminal Justice in New York and a former New York City police inspector. "I like that it is bringing the police out in the community, sort of showing them in a different light, that they are humans," Quick said. However, he asked, "Is this an actual meaningful interaction that's really going to shape somebody's long-term perceptions about the police, or is it going be 'I got a free ice cream sandwich from some cop in an ice cream truck' but yet later on down the road when I actually have a meaningful interaction my perceptions are the same?"

Freeze! Police ice cream trucks seek to portray officers in a positive light

Freeze! Police ice cream trucks seek to portray officers in a positive light NORWICH, Conn. (AP) — The puns are plentiful as police departme...
'Strange noises' heard before squatter found in house with lights, TV and bedNew Foto - 'Strange noises' heard before squatter found in house with lights, TV and bed

A man was discovered living in a crawl space beneath a home near Portland, Oregon without the owner's knowledge, authorities say. The man had been living there for an extended period of time, having set up a bed and lights, the Clackamas County Sheriff's Office said. The owner told deputies no-one should be living there and they had heard "strange noises" coming from the space. Deputies found 40-year-old Beniamin Bucur inside the crawl space and arrested him on charges of burglary and unlawful possession of methamphetamine. Shortly before 23:00 local time on Wednesday, sheriff's deputies responded to investigate a suspicious circumstance in a residential area close to Happy Valley, a small city south-east of Portland. A witness reported seeing a man who was not known to live in nearby homes parking his car and walking towards the back of the three-storey housing complex. The witness also noticed the door to the crawl space was open and light was coming from inside. When deputies arrived, they noticed the door was damaged and had been locked. An extension cord was seen running through a vent. After contacting the owner and being told no one should be there, deputies tried to open the door with the owner's keys, but they did not work. Deputies forced the door open and discovered Bucur. Bucur "was obviously living inside", law enforcement said, as the room was fitted with various electrics, including chargers, a television, and lights plugged into the power of the house, as well as a bed. A meth pipe was also found in the search, the sheriff's office said. Bucur was booked into jail and his bail was set at $75,000 (£55,524).

'Strange noises' heard before squatter found in house with lights, TV and bed

'Strange noises' heard before squatter found in house with lights, TV and bed A man was discovered living in a crawl space beneath a...
"SNL" Alum Kate McKinnon Reveals She Was Diagnosed With Geographic Tongue: 'It's Gross' (Exclusive)

Bryan Adams/Searchlight Pictures Leave it toKate McKinnonto have a little fun with a benign medical diagnosis. TheSNLalum, 41, who is featured in this week's One Last Thing, was asked about the last screenshot or picture she took on her phone. "I took a photo of my tongue and sent it to an actor friend of mine," she says. "We both have the same medical condition. It's called geographic tongue. Your tongue sheds in patches and looks like an atlas, hence the name 'geographic tongue.'" Jason Mendez/Getty for Searchlight Pictures According to Mayo Clinic,geographic tongueis an inflammatory but harmless condition affecting the surface of the tongue. Patches on the tongue are missing papillae, which are tiny, pinkish-white bumps, and look like a map. They often appear in one area and then move to a different part of the tongue. "It's gross," McKinnon adds. "We brag about how geographic we are on any given day. Maybe I shouldn't be saying this in a magazine." Related:Kate McKinnon Is Ready for the 'Adventures to Continue' in Sequel to Bestselling Children's Mystery Novel — See the Cover! (Exclusive) The actress, who is releasing her children's book,Secrets of the Purple Pearl, the second in her seriesThe Millicent Quibb School of Etiquette for Young Ladies of Mad Science,and stars in the movieThe Roses, shared more with PEOPLE for One Last Thing: Last obsessionI am obsessed with the lifestyle vlog of a family in the mountains of Azerbaijan who grow and prepare copious amounts of gorgeous food. There is no dialogue. The mother, Aziza, has these big hands and these giant enamel bowls and she'll just punch out a batch of dough for 80 meat pies. She pickles 100 pounds of cucumbers with the ease that most people chew gum. Her rolling pin is five feet long. I'm not sure who's eating all the meat pies. Hachette Book Group Last life hack I learnedYou can lacto-fermentanyvegetable by putting them in a big clean jar with water to cover and then you weigh all that and subtract the weight of the jar, and then multiply that by .035 and then add that amount of salt (by weight), shake it up and let it sit for 7 days. I've been fermenting. Aziza made me do it! Last DIY projectI put up these faux-beams on my bedroom ceiling. I sourced the wood and cut it and oiled it and treated it for bugs and installed it and fixed it and it took methree years. But the skills I gained will last a lifetime. Iloveskills. Related:Meryl Streep Breaks Character DuringSNLDebut in Hilarious 'Close Encounter' Sketch with Kate McKinnon Last thing I took from a setI was given—I didn't steal—a chess piece from theBarbieset. The set and prop designers forBarbiewere the most incredible artists and artisans and the stuff they made to fill out the world of the Dreamhouse and the Weird Barbie house really should be in a museum. They made a full chess set with these chess pieces in Weird Barbie aesthetic and they were so magical, and I was given, I want say it was a bishop? Tough to tell. Mattel; Courtesy Warner Bros. Pictures Last impulse purchaseI just bought a portable band saw that electricians and plumbers use to cut metal-threaded rod, copper pipe, etc. Whenever I have to cut metal I'm sweating and grunting with a hacksaw. I've wanted one for about a year and I woke up today and I was like, "Today's the day." Last moment of prideI've been doing a lot of audio recording lately with my sister Emily Lynne. We're recording a scripted series for Audible that we wrote and we also just recorded the audiobook of my second novel for children. She's so brilliant and so kind and we are so in sync and I'm just so grateful that the person I would choose out of 8 billion people to be my sister happens to be my sister. Arturo Holmes/Getty Last time I was starstruckI met Jesse Palmer at theSNL50thAnniversary Special. I am always so starstruck anytime I meet someone from theBacheloruniverse. I think I would be most starstruck if I met someone from the HGTV universe. If I met Aziza I would fall at her feet. Secrets of the Purple Pearl,the second book inThe Millicent Quibb School of Etiquette for Young Ladies of Mad Scienceseries will hit bookshelves on Sept. 30. The Rosesis now in theaters. Read the original article onPeople

“SNL” Alum Kate McKinnon Reveals She Was Diagnosed With Geographic Tongue: 'It's Gross' (Exclusive)

"SNL" Alum Kate McKinnon Reveals She Was Diagnosed With Geographic Tongue: 'It's Gross' (Exclusive) Bryan Adams/Search...

 

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