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Georgia detains second opposition leader within days as ruling party faces more protests

Georgia detains second opposition leader within days as ruling party faces more protests

Washington Post30-05-2025

TBILISI, Georgia — Georgian police on Friday detained a second opposition leader within days as protests continue in the South Caucasus country against the ruling Georgian Dream party.
Lawyers for Nika Melia, one of the figureheads for Georgia's pro-Western Coalition for Change, said his car was stopped by police on Thursday. Soon after, he was bundled away by a large group of people in civilian clothing.

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Thai Protesters Vent Their Exasperation With the Prime Minister
Thai Protesters Vent Their Exasperation With the Prime Minister

New York Times

time4 hours ago

  • New York Times

Thai Protesters Vent Their Exasperation With the Prime Minister

Thousands of protesters took to the streets of Bangkok on Saturday to call for the resignation of Thailand's prime minister, Paetongtarn Shinawatra, whose leaked phone conversation with Cambodia's de facto leader has stirred growing anger. As of Saturday afternoon, more than 6,000 demonstrators had gathered at the Victory Monument, a war memorial, according to the police. The protests, which persisted through a heavy downpour, were largely peaceful, but they add to the pressure on Ms. Paetongtarn after the call, which captured her appearing to disparage her own country's powerful military and taking a deferential tone. The protests are being closely watched in a country where public demonstrations have precipitated the downfalls of previous governments. The turmoil has also stoked fears that the military could intervene. Though coups have been a regular feature of Thailand's modern history, analysts say they do not think one is likely now. Thailand in the past week has been gripped by the revelations of the June 15 call between Ms. Paetongtarn and Hun Sen, who was Cambodia's prime minister for decades and remains head of the country's People's Party. In the audio, Ms. Paetongtarn, 38, called Mr. Hun Sen, 72, 'uncle' and told him that she would 'arrange' anything that he wants. 'This prime minister is selling out the nation,' said Patcharee Twitchsri, 66, a former insurance agent. 'She is doing everything for her personal gain. Also, she has no experience.' Ms. Paetongtarn, who has condemned the leak, said she was merely using a negotiation tactic to address a simmering border dispute. On Saturday, visiting Chiang Rai to monitor flood conditions, she told reporters that it was the protesters' right to call for her resignation, and said that she was open to discussing matters peacefully. 'I don't intend to retaliate,' she said. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.

Trump's Immigration Arrests Are Seeing A Wave Of Resistance
Trump's Immigration Arrests Are Seeing A Wave Of Resistance

Yahoo

time5 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Trump's Immigration Arrests Are Seeing A Wave Of Resistance

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She mentioned people protesting outside of ICE agents' hotels, physically manifesting their disagreement. 'There's lots of different ways to do these bystander interventions. It doesn't require that you be standing there while ICE tries to arrest someone standing next to you.' Direct action isn't always successful. New York City Comptroller and recent mayoral candidate Brad Lander has himself volunteered to escort immigrants to and from their hearings, and was recently detained for several hours by federal agents for it as he locked arms with one immigration court respondent as agents arrested the man. The man is still in ICE detention, Lander said Monday. But it's a numbers game. Lander has said that on previous volunteer shifts, he was able to escort other immigration court respondents to and from their hearings without incident. 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Trump has also worked hard to create more undocumented people, moving to end deportation protections for over 1 million people who applied through humanitarian channels, including Temporary Protected Status, the CBP One app, and the CHNV (Cuba, Haiti, Nicaragua, Venezuela) parole program. And we've seen immigration hearings and regular ICE check-ins leveraged to increase arrest numbers. In such an intrusive, byzantine, dehumanizing system, immigration lawyers are crucial. They can pursue legal pathways that can slow or prevent deportation, such as the asylum process, while also advocating for release from immigration detention as cases proceed. 'Having a lawyer represent someone in deportation proceedings makes an enormous difference,' the New York Immigration Coalition explains. 'Sixty percent of not detained immigrants with lawyers win their cases, versus 17% who don't have legal help. 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This tension is part of theargument for 'universalrepresentation' for respondents in the immigration legal system, just like public defenders are guaranteed regardless of ability to pay in criminal court. Wherever the funding comes from, the availability of legal representation will be a key variable in the ultimate scope of Trump's deportations. Even though immigration enforcement is a federal job, local cooperation is a crucial part of the operation. Jail space that local governments rent out to ICE is the most common type of immigration detention, one 2020 analysis found. Localities also frequently coordinate law enforcement operations with immigration authorities, including, crucially, the hand-off of undocumented people who are being released from local jails. Laws in Texas and Florida (both currently paused by courts) criminalize being undocumented on the state level. And recently, all kinds of local law enforcement agencies, including university police departments, have been entering into so-called '287(g) agreements' with ICE in record numbers; the agreements essentially deputize local corrections officers, police officers and sheriffs deputies as de facto immigration agents, such that 'in encounters with local law enforcement, they no longer have to wait to call ICE for ICE to show up to make an immigration arrest,' Hahn said. 'The sheriffs in the room, we need your bed space. We need your 287(g) agreements,' Trump's Border Czar Tom Homan told a meeting of the National Sheriffs' Association in February. 'We need that force multiplier.' Over the past few decades, the so-called 'sanctuary' movement has emerged to minimize this kind of collaboration. There's no single 'sanctuary policy.' Rather, the term refers to a groupofpolicies that can be effectuated at the state and local level, all with the aim of limiting involvement in immigration enforcement. Taken together, sanctuary policies can prevent a routine traffic stop from turning into immigration detention and deportation. And, crucially, decisions around sanctuary status are made at the local and state level, so even if Trump and the Republican party control Washington, D.C., anti-ICE activists are still able to make a big difference. To put it plainly, the reason Trump and Republicans hatesanctuaryjurisdictions is because they work. During former President Barack 'Deporter-In-Chief' Obama's presidency, we saw that as more and more communities enacted sanctuary policies, ICE's capacity to arrest and deport people plunged. Referring to 'custodial' arrests, where ICE picks someone up after they've been arrested by another law enforcement agency, the libertarian Cato Institute found in 2018 that 'Local and state non-cooperation with ICE works to reduce the number of ICE arrests[,] as between 70 percent and 90 percent of those arrests are custodial [since 2008].' Sanctuary policies 'reduce deportations by one-third,' while having no measurable effect on crime, the legal scholar David K. Hausman found in 2020. 'This is the time to really focus locally, because you have a lot more power at the local level,' Silky Shah, executive director of Detention Watch Network, a coalition working to abolish U.S. immigration detention, told HuffPost. 'I remind people that sanctuary policies really flourished under the Obama administration because people were just so frustrated by the scale of deportations in the criminal-legal system.' It can be difficult to track what localities have sanctuary policies, as the Trump administration itself recently discovered. The list of localities participating in 287(g) agreements is fairly well-documented, both by ICE itself and groups like the Immigrant Legal Resource Center. (The latter organization in 2019 also authored an 'Ending 287(g) Toolkit for Local Organizers.') But there's no single resource to check your locality's stance on other sanctuary issues, and localities are constantlyreevaluating their cooperation with the federal government on immigration enforcement. The extent of that cooperation is a prime battleground for people who want to disrupt Trump's mass deportation agenda. 'Go to your county commission hearings, go to your city council,' Shah said, noting that community activism has led to major changes, like a 2022 law in Illinois entirely outlawing immigration detention in the state. 'There's people doing this work across the country at the local level, and there's a lot of possibility to protect immigrants.' Trump will vastly increase the scale of his mass deportation agenda with the enormous budget increase he wants to give federal law enforcement, particularly at the Department of Homeland Security. DHS houses the primary agencies carrying out arrests and deportations, Immigration and Customs Enforcement and Customs and Border Protection, the latter of which includes Border Patrol. In addition to further militarizing the U.S. border and targeting immigrant families with onerous fees and exclusion from public benefits, the proposed Republican budget bill ― the so-called Big, Beautiful Bill ― massively expands the federal police budget, with a specific eye toward immigration arrests and removals. The proposal would spend $45 billion to expand immigration detention, including familydetention ― that's over four times more than ICE's entire 2024 budget, and 13 times ICE's 2024 detention budget, according to a National Immigration Law Center analysis. That increase is part of an even larger overall explosion in the size of the immigration enforcement budget, including tens of billions of dollars for hiring thousands more Border Patrol and ICE agents, as well as transportation funding for driving and flying detainees between detention centers and outside the country. 'Detention is the way they can deport people, so they're very, very committed to having more detention capacity, in order to reach their numbers,' said Shah. She noted research from her group and others showing that 'as detention capacity increases, so do ICE apprehensions.' 'There's so much damaging about this budget bill,' she added. 'I think we're in a moment [like the aftermath of the 9/11 attacks] where they're just going to throw so much money at this that they're going to build up a system that's going to be very hard to take down.' Don't just take critics' word for it. Homan has repeatedly said the scale of Trump's deportations depends directly on resources. 'Everybody always asks me, 'How many people can you remove?' I don't know. What do our resources look like?' he told Fox Newsshortly after Election Day 2024. 'How many beds are we going to have? What's the size of the transportation contract? How many resources do I have? How many officers do I have? Can I bring back retired officers? Can [the Department of Defense] help, with a lot of the stuff that doesn't require arrest, where you don't have to have a badge and a gun and immigration authority? There are a lot of things — whether it's transportation, or logistics, or infrastructure-building — that DOD can do.' In a Fox Business interview Wednesday, Homan hammered home a similar argument, calling the proposed massive budget increases 'imperative' to procure more agents, detention beds, transportation streams, and resources to 'target' people for arrest. 'Get it done,' he told members of Congress. 'We need the funds to get this done.' 'It's Entrapment': ICE Accused Of Detaining Immigrants In Court Building Overnight During Routine Check-Ins Neighbors Band Together To 'Shame' ICE Agents Out Of Their Community, And It's Powerful California Rep: 'We Don't Want ICE In Our Community. We Want You Out.'

Bret Bielema calls out Kirby Smart, Georgia for tampering
Bret Bielema calls out Kirby Smart, Georgia for tampering

Yahoo

time8 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Bret Bielema calls out Kirby Smart, Georgia for tampering

The post Bret Bielema calls out Kirby Smart, Georgia for tampering appeared first on ClutchPoints. When a college football player receives communication from another team about playing for said team before the player has entered the transfer portal, it is called tampering. Tampering is a big problem in college sports, and it is against the rules. However, it's abundantly clear that it happens all the time, and there are rarely any punishments for it. For example, Illinois football head coach Bret Bielema is pretty confident that Kirby Smart and Georgia tampered with his running back Josh McCray. Advertisement Josh McCray was one of the best players on the Illinois football team last season, but he now resides in Athens, Georgia. He entered the transfer portal this past offseason, and it didn't take him very long to land with the Bulldogs. 'We did lose a guy to Georgia,' Bielema said during a recent episode of The Triple Option. 'Somehow, he found his way to the portal and 12 hours after being in the portal, he was on a flight to Georgia. I don't know how that happened, but it's crazy. Wish Josh all the best. He took advantage of that opportunity.' McCray had over 600 rushing yards and 10 touchdowns last season for the Fighting Illini. Losing him hurts, but Bielema has a lot of confidence in this year's running back room. It reminds him of a special one that he had back in the day at Wisconsin. 'I'm very excited,' Bielema said. 'We had three guys last year that are coming back to us that are very special. And it's kind of like what I had when I was at Wisco. I had a roster one year John Clay was a fifth-rounder to Pittsburgh, big 260-pound bruiser, just a workout (warrior). Behind him was a guy by the name Montee Ball, ended up being a second-round pick to the Denver Broncos.' Advertisement Just those players would make for an incredibly stacked RB room, but Bielema wasn't finished. 'Then behind him was this young guy named James White, who was the Freshman Big Ten Player of the Year,' he continued. 'Then there was this other guy, Melvin Gordon, who became a first-rounder. Those four guys were on one roster. All four of them were just a little bit different, and that's kind of what I've got going now.' Tampering is a huge problem in college football, and Bret Bielema thinks that his team was a victim of it this offseason. However, the Illinois football team is going with a next man up mentality, and Bielema is confident that the Fighting Illini will be successful at the RB position. Related: North Carolina, Bill Belichick lands ex-Alabama commit to bolster secondary Related: Lee Corso's son is 'disappointed' by College GameDay's Ohio State selection

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