
Florida's 'Alligator Alcatraz' Detention Center Is Set to Receive Its First Group of Immigrants
'Alligator Alcatraz will be checking in hundreds of criminal illegal aliens tonight,' Florida Republican Attorney General James Uthmeier said on the X social media platform. 'Next stop: back to where they came from.'
The facility at an airport used for training will have a capacity of about 3,000 detainees when fully operational, according to Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis. The center was built in eight days over 10 miles (16 kilometers) of Everglades. It features more than 200 security cameras, 28,000-plus feet (8,500 meters) of barbed wire, and 400 security personnel.
Environmental groups and Native American tribes have protested against the center, contending it is a threat to the fragile Everglades system, would be cruel to detainees because of heat and mosquitoes, and is on land the tribes consider sacred.
DeSantis and other state officials say locating the facility in the rugged and remote Florida Everglades is meant as a deterrent, and naming it after the notorious federal prison of Alcatraz–an island fortress known for its brutal conditions–is meant to send a message.
It's another sign of how the Trump administration and its allies are relying on scare tactics to try to persuade people in the country illegally to leave voluntarily.
State and federal officials have touted the plans on social media and conservative airwaves, sharing a meme of a compound ringed with barbed wire and guarded by alligators wearing hats labeled 'ICE' for Immigration and Customs Enforcement.
The Republican Party of Florida has taken to fundraising off the detention center, selling branded T-shirts and beer koozies emblazoned with the facility's name.
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Arab News
4 hours ago
- Arab News
Family of Palestinian-American boy held by Israel ask US govt for help securing his release
LONDON: A Palestinian-American family is trying to secure the release of a 16-year-old detained by Israel for more than five months, The Guardian reported. Muhammad Zaher Ibrahim was detained at the family's home in the occupied West Bank in February when he was 15, accused by Israel of throwing rocks at soldiers. He was blindfolded, handcuffed and taken to Megiddo Prison in Israel where, his family say, he has lost a significant amount of weight while awaiting trial. The family splits its time between their home in the West Bank town of Silwad and the city of Palm Bay, Florida. His father Zaher Ibrahim wrote to his local Congressman Mike Haridopolos asking for help in securing his son's release. 'The Megiddo Prison is notorious for brutality and suffering,' Zaher Ibrahim wrote to Haridopolos on a form seen by The Guardian. 'We are kindly asking for some support in this matter. We have exhausted all efforts locally here in Israel and have no other option than to ask our local Florida office officials to reach out on our behalf.' Haridopolos's office said it had been informed by the State Department that the US Embassy in Israel is 'following standard procedures' on the matter. A spokesperson for the department said it has 'no higher priority than the safety and security of US citizens.' Muhammad Ibrahim's detention first came to prominence after his cousin Sayfollah Musallet was allegedly killed by Israeli settlers in the West Bank in July. Musallet, 20, who was also a US citizen, had been visiting relatives when he was beaten to death. There are hundreds of Palestinian children in detention in Israeli jails, many without charge or contact with their families. According to Defense for Children International-Palestine, as of March this year that figure was 323 aged 12-17 years. Between 2005 and 2010, 835 Palestinian children in that age bracket were tried for stone-throwing by Israeli military courts. Only one was acquitted. Ayed Abu Eqtaish, the West Bank-based accountability program director at Defense for Children International-Palestine, told The Guardian: 'Palestinian children in Israeli prisons are totally disconnected from the outside world. They (Israel) will not recognize whether you are American, Somalian or whatever your citizenship.' Abu Eqtaish said since Oct. 7, 2023, conditions in Israeli jails for Palestinians have worsened, adding: 'Now they are stricter in punishment and sentences. We encounter problems knowing about living conditions inside prisons. There's no family presence. Lawyer visits are very restricted.' A State Department official told the Ibrahim family via email that embassy staff had visited him in prison but faced contact restrictions put in place by Israel. During one welfare check, he was found to have lost 12 kg in weight. In another, staff reported that he was receiving treatment for scabies contracted in jail. In a statement, a State Department spokesperson told The Guardian that it 'works to provide consular assistance which may include visiting detained US citizens to ensure they have access to necessary medication or medical attention and facilitating authorized communications with their family or others.'


Arab News
7 hours ago
- Arab News
Protesters slam The New York Times over Gaza famine coverage
LONDON: Protesters targeted the headquarters of The New York Times in Manhattan on Thursday, accusing the newspaper of whitewashing Israel's role in the humanitarian catastrophe unfolding in Gaza, where Tel Aviv is already facing charges of war crimes and genocide. Videos circulating online showed pro-Palestinian activists defacing the building with the words 'NYT lies, Gaza dies' in bold white lettering, alongside red paint smeared over the publication's logo. A nearby Starbucks logo was also vandalized with red paint. Activists accused the 173-year-old paper of bowing to pressure from pro-Israel lobby groups and 'eliding' the fact that Tel Aviv 'engineered the starvation.' 'In the past week, more than 100 Palestinians in Gaza have died of starvation. Six hundred and fifty thousand children have reached the fifth stage of malnutrition, which means those who do not die will likely suffer from permanent organ damage,' read a statement shared anonymously alongside footage of the protest. 'Who is responsible? You'd never know from reading the so-called 'paper of record,'' it continued. 'It is our responsibility as people who live in this city to hold The New York Times to account. May life and peace return to Gaza, while consequences visit the home of every genocidaire.' No group has claimed responsibility for the action, though the statement has been widely circulated online by anonymous activists. Inbox: 'NEW YORK TIMES IS STARVING GAZA'@nytimes protested against for its coverage of Israel's deliberate forced starvation of Palestinians, as well as its consistently sympathetic framing of Israel's ongoing apartheid and now genocide of Palestine. Communique in next: — Talia Jane (@taliaotg) July 30, 2025 The protest came days after the NYT amended a front-page article on the famine in Gaza. On Thursday, an analysis by The Intercept found that the NYT repeated Israel's baseless claim that Hamas was stealing aid nearly 24 times before its own sources contradicted that talking point. The report originally included a photo of severely malnourished Mohammed Zakaria Al-Mutawaq. But a subsequent correction stated that the child had a pre-existing medical condition that affected his appearance — a revision made following pressure from pro-Israel media watchdogs including Honest Reporting. Former Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett reacted to the correction on X, writing: 'This is simply unbelievable. After generating a tsunami of hate towards Israel with that terrifying picture, the NYT now quietly admits that the boy has pre-existing conditions.' The NYT — like other Western media outlets — has come under increasing criticism for coverage perceived as biased in favor of Israel during its ongoing assault on Gaza. Earlier this week, Gaza health authorities said the death toll had surpassed 60,000 — roughly one in every 36 people — with a third of the dead believed to be children. A UN-backed monitor confirmed that famine is now 'playing out' in real time across the territory. The controversy comes on the heels of a report by Writers Against the War on Gaza, which accused the NYT of institutional and individual bias in its coverage. The dossier alleges ties between current staff members and pro-Israel lobbying groups or the Israeli military.


Al Arabiya
8 hours ago
- Al Arabiya
Trump calls on Federal Reserve board to wrest full control of central bank from Fed Chair Powell
President Donald Trump on Friday called for the Federal Reserve's board of governors to usurp the power of Fed Chair Jerome Powell criticizing the head of the US central bank for not cutting short-term interest rates. Posting on his Truth Social platform Trump called Powell stubborn. The Fed chair has been subjected to vicious verbal attacks by the Republican president over several months. The Fed has the responsibility of stabilizing prices and maximizing employment. Powell has held its benchmark rate for overnight loans constant this year saying that Fed officials needed to see what impact Trump's massive tariffs had on inflation. If Powell doesn't substantially lower rates Trump said 'THE BOARD SHOULD ASSUME CONTROL AND DO WHAT EVERYONE KNOWS HAS TO BE DONE!' Trump sees the rate cuts as leading to stronger growth and lower debt servicing costs for the federal government and homebuyers. The president argues there is virtually no inflation even though the Fed's preferred measure is running at an annual rate of 2.6 percent slightly higher than the Fed's 2 percent target. Trump has called for slashing the Fed's benchmark rate by 3 percentage points bringing it down dramatically from its current average of 4.33 percent. The risk is that a rate cut that large could cause more money to come into the economy than can be absorbed possibly causing inflation to accelerate. The Supreme Court suggested in a May ruling that Trump could not remove Powell for policy disagreements. This led the White House to investigate whether the Fed chair could be fired for cause because of the cost overruns in its 2.5 billion renovation projects. Powell's term as chair ends in May 2026 at which point Trump can put his Senate-confirmed pick in the seat.