World
US ‘Dreamers’ demand action as court ruling fuels uncertainty
Washington, DC – Chanting “house is right here” outdoors the US Capitol constructing, dozens of migrants who got here to the US as kids and their supporters have referred to as on lawmakers to guard a programme that shields them from deportation.
The protest on Thursday got here simply hours after a US appeals courtroom affirmed a decrease courtroom’s ruling that deemed the Deferred Motion for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) programme “illegal” – and leaving the scheme’s future unsure.
“I stay with fixed concern each single day,” Monica Camacho, who got here to the US from Mexico as a baby and acquired DACA in 2013, mentioned over speakerphone through the rally, which was livestreamed.
Camacho mentioned receiving DACA – a standing she has to resume each two years – enabled her to purchase a home and grow to be a instructor, however the truth that the programme is susceptible to authorized challenges and political whims places her and different recipients in limbo.
“I’m uninterested in continuously having to elucidate to politicians my price,” Camacho mentioned.
‘Dreamers’
DACA was created in 2012 below the administration of then-President Barack Obama. It gives security from deportation to undocumented immigrants who got here to the US as minors, and permits them to work, examine, open companies and get driver’s licences, amongst different issues.
However DACA was handed by means of govt motion after Congress didn’t go the American Dream and Promise Act, a invoice that aimed to place DACA recipients, sometimes called “Dreamers“, on a path to US citizenship.
This has meant that, 10 years later, DACA has remained momentary, and may very well be ended by means of courtroom challenges or additional govt measures.
Final 12 months, a US district choose in Texas declared DACA unlawful, saying the programme had not gone by means of the required public discover and remark intervals. Choose Andrew Hanen blocked new functions for DACA, however allowed the greater than 600,000 individuals at present enrolled within the programme to proceed benefitting from it.
The fifth Circuit upheld Choose Hanen’s resolution that the chief department would not have the authorized authority to assist DACA recipients as a result of Congress hasn’t given it. So, Congress can provide it now. 2/
— Theresa Cardinal Brown (@BPC_TBrown) October 6, 2022
Wednesday’s appeals courtroom resolution affirmed that 2021 ruling – permitting these at present enrolled in DACA to take care of and renew their standing, however persevering with to bar new functions.
The appeals courtroom additionally ordered Hanen to go over revisions to the programme launched by President Joe Biden’s administration final month.
In September, the Biden administration proposed modifications to DACA that will “protect and fortify” the programme by making it topic to public feedback and subsequently extra more likely to survive future authorized challenges.
Biden, who as candidate pledged to guard Dreamers, mentioned he was “disillusioned” by the appeals courtroom’s ruling. “The courtroom’s keep gives a brief reprieve for DACA recipients however one factor stays clear: the lives of Dreamers stay in limbo,” he mentioned in a press release on Wednesday.
“And whereas we’ll use the instruments we’ve got to permit Dreamers to stay and work in the one nation they know as house, it’s long gone time for Congress to go everlasting protections for Dreamers, together with a pathway to citizenship,” Biden mentioned.
Secretary of Homeland Safety Alejandro Mayorkas mentioned the Biden administration is at present reviewing the courtroom’s resolution and would work with the Division of Justice on the subsequent steps.
I’m deeply disillusioned by right this moment’s #DACA ruling and the continued uncertainty it creates for households and communities throughout the nation.
We’re at present reviewing the courtroom’s resolution and can work with @TheJusticeDept on an acceptable authorized response.
(1/)
— Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas (@SecMayorkas) October 6, 2022
‘Emotionally draining’
Dreamers, in the meantime, have mentioned they’re uninterested in continuously worrying about their future.
Bruna Sollod, 31, got here to the US from Brazil as a baby. She obtained DACA 10 years in the past, which enabled her to advance her profession, get a job in politics, and have entry to healthcare. However persistent fears in regards to the future have been all-consuming, she mentioned.
“DACA has at all times been flawed. We’ve at all times lived on this two-year increment and it has been exhausting,” Sollod informed Al Jazeera. “It seems like we’re continuously on a rollercoaster and we don’t ever get to come back off,” she mentioned. “It’s emotionally draining.”
Immigrant advocates additionally slammed this week’s courtroom resolution, and referred to as on Congress to go laws that will give Dreamers everlasting protections.
“It is a ghastly resolution and a slap within the face to the a whole lot of 1000’s of younger individuals who stay, work, and worship amongst us day in and time out,” mentioned Vanessa Cardenas, deputy director of America’s Voice, a progressive pro-immigrant group.
“The uncertainty round DACA hurts individuals and households throughout our nation, it hurts our economic system and the 1000’s of employers who depend on valued DACA workers, and undermines our nationwide cohesiveness,” Cardenas mentioned in a press release.
Diana Pliego, 28, a coverage affiliate on the Nationwide Immigration Regulation Heart, mentioned she got here to the US from Mexico at age three and acquired DACA when she turned 18. “I’ve numerous conflicted emotions,” Pliego informed Al Jazeera, in regards to the courtroom’s resolution.
“I felt reduction that renewals will get to proceed, however I additionally felt numerous frustration and anger as a result of we’re right here once more,” she mentioned. “And I misplaced depend of what number of occasions we sat right here [after] a courtroom resolution that might or couldn’t pull the rug from below us and have an effect on our futures.”
World
Thousands of Venezuelan opposition supporters take to the streets ahead of Maduro's third inauguration
- Venezuelan opposition parties and their supporters protested around the country on Thursday in a last-minute effort to put pressure on President Nicolás Maduro, one day before he is due to be sworn in for his third six-year term.
- Maria Corina Machado, Venezuela’s most popular opposition leader, made an appearance for the first time since August when she went into hiding at an unknown location.
- Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro, 62, has been in power since 2013.
Venezuelan opposition parties and their supporters – including leader Maria Corina Machado, who had been in hiding – protested around the country on Thursday in an eleventh-hour effort to put pressure on President Nicolás Maduro, one day before he is due to be sworn in for his third six-year term.
The opposition and the ruling party are locked in an ongoing dispute over last year’s presidential election, which they both claim to have won.
The country’s electoral authority and top court say Maduro, whose time in office has been marked by a deep economic and social crisis, won the July vote, though they have never published detailed tallies.
VENEZUELAN OPPOSITION LEADER MARÍA MACHADO HAS URGENT MESSAGE FOR PRESIDENT-ELECT DONALD TRUMP
The government, which has accused the opposition of fomenting fascist plots against it, said it will arrest opposition leader Edmundo Gonzalez should he return to the country and has detained prominent opposition members and activists in the lead-up to the inauguration.
The opposition says Gonzalez, 75, won in a landslide. It has published its own vote tallies as evidence, winning support from governments around the world, including the United States, which consider Gonzalez the president-elect.
Machado, who is the country’s most popular opposition leader but who was barred from running in 2024, joined a protest in Chacao in eastern Caracas at around 2:20 p.m. local time (18:20 GMT), dressed in a white shirt and blue jeans and waving a Venezuelan flag from the top of a truck.
“They lost the streets, which are ours, they are barricaded in Miraflores (presidential palace),” Machado told the crowd. “From today we are in a new phase.”
Her appearance marked her first public outing since August when she went into hiding at an unknown location.
Machado, 57, urged protesters to peacefully flood the streets and repeatedly asked members of the police and military – who guarded polling stations during the election – to back Gonzalez’s victory.
“I’m not afraid, I lost my fear a long time ago,” said 70-year-old Neglis Payares, a retired central bank worker, as she gathered with other opposition supporters in western Caracas in the morning.
“We don’t know how many of them have their heart on our side,” she added, gesturing at security forces who had gathered near the protest.
2 AMERICANS ARRESTED IN VENEZUELA ON EVE OF MADURO INAUGURATION OVER ‘TERRORISM’ CLAIMS
Reuters witnesses estimated some 7,000 people had gathered in Caracas by around 2:20 p.m. local time. In the days after the election, thousands also took to the streets.
Maduro, 62, has been in power since 2013. He has the vociferous support of leaders in the armed forces and the intelligence services, which are run by close allies of powerful Interior Minister Diosdado Cabello.
“I am convinced nothing will happen,” Cabello said on state television on Monday. “But that doesn’t mean we will lower our guard.”
The military’s financial interests make loyalty shifts unlikely, said BancTrust, a London investment bank, in a note. “A limited military rebellion would entail significant risks for those involved, thus diminishing incentives to participate,” it wrote.
‘WE HAVE NO WORK’
Security forces set up checkpoints around the country.
In the western oil city of Maracaibo, an opposition protest of dozens of people was quickly dispersed by motorcycle-mounted security forces by late morning. In central Valencia, protesters gathered at another location after initially being met with tear gas.
Opposition supporters also gathered in San Cristobal, near the border with Colombia, in the western city of Barquisimeto and in eastern Puerto Ordaz.
“I’m here because we need to get rid of this government. We have no money, we have no work,” 62-year-old housewife Roisa Gomez said at a protest in the central city of Maracay. “I’m fighting for my vote, which I cast for Edmundo Gonzalez. They cannot steal the election.”
Soon afterward, security forces used tear gas to disperse the Maracay protesters.
Many of the demonstrators were of retirement age and said they wanted change so their migrant children and grandchildren would return to the country. More than 7 million Venezuelans live abroad.
The ruling party was holding rival marches nationwide, images of which were broadcast on state television.
“We’ve come out to show that there is a democracy. On this side are the patriots who will be sworn in with Nicolas (Maduro), on the other side are fascists who want (foreign) intervention, war, to sell their country,” said 50-year-old Caracas motorcycle taxi driver Manual Rincon.
Gonzalez, who has been on a tour of the Americas this week and met with U.S. President Joe Biden and President-elect Donald Trump’s national security advisor, has repeatedly pledged to return to Venezuela but given no details about how.
An arrest warrant was issued for Gonzalez for alleged conspiracy, prompting his September flight to Spain.
Machado is being investigated by the attorney general in at least two cases, but no warrant for her has been made public.
The government has detained several high-profile politicians and activists, including a former presidential candidate. This week, the attorney general’s office said it had freed more than 1,500 of the 2,000 people, including teenagers, detained during post-election protests.
Venezuelans living abroad also held protests, including in Madrid, where Gonzalez’s daughter Carolina Gonzalez spoke to hundreds of demonstrators.
“My dad sends a hug to all of you, glory to the brave people of Venezuela,” she said, her voice breaking.
World
Ramstein: Germany pledges tanks, missiles, and air defence for Ukraine
The German Defence Minister has pledged additional military aid to Ukraine at today’s meeting of the Ukraine Defence Contact Group in Ramstein.
At today’s Ukraine Defence Contact Group meeting in Ramstein, German Defence Minister Boris Pistorius has confirmed that Germany will continue its support for Ukraine even after the federal elections in February.
“Ukraine can count on Germany, regardless of the outcome of the election on February 23”, Pistorius said.
Speaking at a press conference after the meeting, Pistorius highlighted Germany’s contribution to protecting the largest logistics hub supporting Ukraine. “In the coming weeks, we will deploy two Patriot missile units and a total of 200 soldiers to Poland”, he announced. The Bundeswehr soldiers are expected to remain in Poland for six months as part of a NATO mission.
While Pistorius did not unveil a large-scale aid package for Ukraine, he pledged to provide the Ukrainian armed forces with three additional IRIS-T SLM and SLS air defence systems, along with 13 more Gepard tanks.
He also intends to supply additional missiles for the IRIS-T systems in the near future. These missiles are part of ongoing production and were originally allocated for the German Bundeswehr.
Contact Group to continue under Trump Presidency
Another key topic at the meeting was the impending Trump presidency in the United States. Pistorius emphasised the importance of continuing the Ukraine Contact Group meetings in Ramstein under Trump’s leadership.
But whether these meetings will actually persist, remains uncertain. However, should the new U.S. administration choose to discontinue the format, “it will need to continue in another form”, Pistorius asserted.
Zelenskyy places hope in Trump Presidency
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has expressed his expectations for the incoming U.S. President, who is set to take office on January 20.
In light of the leadership transition, Zelenskyy also called for strengthened cooperation. “With Trump’s inauguration on January 20, we enter a period where we must work more closely together and achieve better results as a team”, he said during today’s Ukraine Contact Group meeting.
Speaking on a podcast with Russian-American host Lex Fridman earlier this week, Zelenskyy described Trump as a pivotal figure in the effort to stop Putin.
Tymofiy Mylovanov, former Ukrainian Minister of Economic Development and president of the Kyiv School of Economics, told Euronews he believed there will be a serious effort by the Trump administration to get a peace deal without selling out Ukraine. “The aid will continue as a part of strengthening leverage over Putin and enforcement of the deal”, he predicted.
According to Mylovanov, the EU and Germany will at the same time have to step up after Trump assumes office: “Trump has made it clear that Ukraine is the EU’s problem and Germany is the key power in the EU no matter how the local politics looks at the moment.”
World
Los Angeles wildfire economic loss estimates top $50 billion
US private forecaster AccuWeather said on Wednesday that estimated damage and economic loss from the California wildfire, already one of the worst in history, is over $50 billion at a preliminary level.
Raging wildfires in Los Angeles killed at least two people, destroyed hundreds of buildings and stretched firefighting resources and water supplies since they began on Tuesday, with fierce winds hindering firefighting operations and fueling the fires.
AccuWeather, which estimates the loss between $52 billion and $57 billion, added that if the fire spread to densely populated neighborhoods the current estimates for loss would have to be revised upward.
“Should a large number of additional structures be burned in the coming days, it may become the worst wildfire in modern California history based on the number of structures burned and economic loss,” AccuWeather Chief Meteorologist Jonathan Porter said.
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