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US judge briefly pauses deportation of 8 migrants to South Sudan

US judge briefly pauses deportation of 8 migrants to South Sudan

Reuters5 hours ago
July 4 (Reuters) - A federal judge briefly halted the Trump administration on Friday from placing eight migrants on a plane destined for conflict-ridden South Sudan, to give the men time to make their argument to a court in Massachusetts.
U.S. District Judge Randolph Moss in Washington issued the order less than 24 hours after the Supreme Court clarified that a federal judge in Boston could no longer require U.S. Department of Homeland Security to keep custody of the men, who the administration has kept for six weeks on a military base in Djibouti rather than bring back to the United States.
The order stops the U.S. government from moving the men until 4:30 p.m. Eastern Time. They were scheduled to be removed to South Sudan on a 7 p.m. flight.
South Sudan has long been dangerous even for locals. The U.S. State Department advises citizens not to travel there due to violent crime and armed conflict. The United Nations has said the African country's political crisis could reignite a brutal civil war that ended in 2018.
The eight men, who their lawyers said are from Cuba, Laos, Mexico, Burma, Sudan and Vietnam, filed a new legal challenge to their deportation late Thursday after the Supreme Court ruled.
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Fifty years ago Arthur Ashe pulled off an amazing feat, upsetting the odds and becoming the first black man to win the Wimbledon Men's final when he beat fellow American Jimmy Connors - but it was not something he wanted to define his fight to break down barriers around racial discrimination was closer to his heart - and apartheid South Africa became one of his battle grounds."I don't want to be remembered in the final analysis for having won Wimbledon... I take applause for having done it, but it's not the most important thing in my life - not even close," he said in a BBC interview a year before his death in his Centre Court victory on 5 July 1975 was hailed as one of those spine-tingling sporting moments that stopped everyone in their tracks, whether a tennis fan or not, and it is being commemorated with a special display at the Wimbledon was already in his 30s, tall, serene and with a quiet and even-tempered demeanour. Connors, 10 years younger and the defending champion, was an aggressive player and often described as "brattish".Ashe's achievements and the skills and courage he displayed on the court were certainly matched by his actions off it. In the early 1970s, South Africa repeatedly refused to issue a visa for him to travel to the country alongside other US white-minority government there had legalised an extreme system of racial segregation, known as apartheid - or apartness - in authorities said the decision to bar him was based on his "general antagonism" and outspoken remarks about South in 1973, the government relented and granted Ashe a visa to play in the South African Open, which was one of the top tournaments in the world at the was Ashe's first visit to South Africa, and although he stipulated he would only play on condition that the stadium be open to both black and white spectators, it sparked anger among anti-apartheid activists in the US and strong opposition from sections of the black community in South journalist and tennis historian Richard Evans, who became a life-long friend of Ashe, was a member of the press corps on that South Africa says that Ashe was "painfully aware" of the criticism and the accusation that he was in some way giving legitimacy to the South African government - but he was determined to see for himself how people lived there."He felt that he was always being asked about South Africa, but he'd never been. He said: 'How can I comment on a place I don't know? I need to see it and make a judgment. And until I go, I can't do that.'"Evans recalls that during the tour, the South African writer and poet Don Mattera had organised for Ashe to meet a group of black journalists, but the atmosphere was tense and hostile."As I passed someone," Evans told the BBC, "I heard someone say: 'Uncle Tom'" - a slur used to disparage a black person considered servile towards white people."And then one or two very vociferous journalists stood up and said: 'Arthur, go home. We don't want you here. You're just making it easier for the government to be able to show that they allow someone like you in.'" But not all black South Africans were so vehemently opposed to Ashe's presence in the South African author and academic Mark Mathabane grew up in the Alexandra township - popularly known as Alex - in the north of Johannesburg. Such townships were set up under apartheid on the outskirts of cities for non-white people to first became aware of Ashe as a boy while accompanying his grandmother to her gardening job at a British family's mansion in a whites-only lady of the house gifted him a September 1968 edition of Life magazine from her collection, and there, on the front cover, was a bespectacled Arthur Ashe at the was mesmerised by the image and its cover line "The Icy Elegance of Arthur Ashe" - and he set out to emulate Ashe went on the 1973 tour, Mathabane had only one mission - to meet Ashe, or at least get close to opportunity came when Ashe took time off from competing to hold a tennis clinic in Soweto, a southern Johannesburg township. The 13-year-old Mathabane made the train journey to get there and join scores of other black - and mostly young - people who had turned out to see the tennis star, who they had given the nickname "Sipho"."He may have been honorary white to white people, but to us black people he was Sipho. It's a Zulu word for gift," Mathabane, now aged 64, told the BBC."You know, a gift from God, from the ancestors, meaning that this is very priceless, take care of it. Sipho is here, Sipho from America is here." The excitement generated at the Soweto clinic was not just contained to that township but had spread across the country, he rural reservations to shebeens or speakeasies (bars) - wherever black people gathered, they were talking about Ashe's visit."For me, he was literally the first free black man I'd ever seen," said the 1973 tour, Ashe went back to South Africa a few more times. In early 1976 he helped to establish the Arthur Ashe Soweto Tennis Centre (AASTC) for budding players in the not long after it opened, the centre was vandalised in the student-led uprisings against the apartheid regime that broke out in June of that remained neglected and in disrepair for several years before undergoing a major refurbishment in 2007, and was reopened by Ashe's widow Jeanne complex now has 16 courts, and hosts a library and skills development centre. The ambition is to produce a tennis star and Grand Slam champion from the township - and legends such as Serena and Venus Williams have since run clinics Mothobi Seseli and Masodi Xaba, who were once both South African national junior champions and now sit on the AASTC board, the centre goes beyond feel that fundamentally it is about instilling a work ethic that embraces a range of life skills and self-belief."We're building young leaders," Ms Xaba, a successful businesswoman, told the Seseli, an entrepreneur born and raised in Soweto, agrees that this would be Ashe's vision too: "When I think about what his legacy is, it is believing that we can, at the smallest of scales, move the dial in very big ways."Ashe was initially inclined to challenge apartheid through conversations and participation, believing that by being visible and winning matches in the country he could undermine the very foundation of the his experience within South Africa, and international pressure from the anti-apartheid movement, persuaded him that isolation rather than engagement would be the most effective way to bring about change in South became a powerful advocate and supporter of an international sporting boycott of South Africa, speaking before the United Nations and the US 1983, at a joint press conference set up by the Organisation of African Unity (OAU) and UN, he spoke about the aims of the Artists and Athletes Against Apartheid, which he had just co-founded with the American singer Harry Belafonte. The organisation lobbied for sanctions against the South African government, and at its height had more than 500 joined many protests and rallies, and when he was arrested outside the South African embassy in Washington DC in 1985, it drew more international attention to the cause and helped to amplify global condemnation of the South African was the captain of the US Davis Cup team at the time, and always felt that the arrest cost him his used his platform to confront social injustice wherever he saw it, not just in Africa and South Africa, but also in the US and was also an educator on many issues, and specifically HIV/Aids, which he succumbed to, after contracting the disease from a blood transfusion during heart surgery in the early he had a particular affinity with South Africa's black population living under a repressive said that he identified with them because of his upbringing in racially segregated Richmond in the US state of wonder then that Ashe was one of the key figures that South African anti-apartheid hero Nelson Mandela was keen to meet on a trip to New York, inviting him to a historic townhall gathering in 1990 shortly after his release from 27 years in pair met on a few occasions, however Ashe did not live to see Mandela become president of South Africa following the 1994 election, which brought in democratic rule and the dismantling of like Ashe, Mandela was able to use sport to push for change - by helping unify South Africa - notably during the 1995 Rugby World Cup when he famously wore the Springbok jersey, once a hated symbol of apartheid. To celebrate this year's anniversary of Ashe's victory, the Wimbledon Championships have an installation in the International Tennis Centre tunnel and a new museum display about him. They are also taking a trailblazer workshop on the road to mark his Wimbledon title was the third of his Grand Slam crowns, having previously won the US and Australian to many people like Mathabane - who in 1978 became the first black South African to earn a tennis scholarship to a US university - Arthur Ashe's legacy was his activism, not his tennis."He was literally helping to liberate my mind from those mental chains of self-doubt, of believing the big lie about your inferiority and the fact that you're doomed to repeat the work of your parents as a drudge," he said."So that was the magic - because he was showing me possibilities." You may also be interested in: 'I'm not afraid of dying': The pioneering tennis champion who told the world he had AidsArthur Ashe's 1976 interview: 'Fighting the myth''Growing up black' made Arthur Ashe crave control Go to for more news from the African us on Twitter @BBCAfrica, on Facebook at BBC Africa or on Instagram at bbcafrica

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