logo
#

Latest news with #Tufts'

Nutrition isn't a side note anymore: IISc and Tufts team up to heal through food
Nutrition isn't a side note anymore: IISc and Tufts team up to heal through food

India Today

time3 days ago

  • Health
  • India Today

Nutrition isn't a side note anymore: IISc and Tufts team up to heal through food

For decades, medical training -- in India and beyond -- has treated nutrition as an optional extra. Doctors graduated with barely a handful of lectures on food, and disease treatment mostly leaned on pills and surgeries. But that script is changing a landmark collaboration, Bengaluru's Indian Institute of Science (IISc) and the US-based Tufts University have signed an agreement to bring nutrition back to the heart of medicine. And not just as an add-on -- as the starting point for is of fundamental importance to the health of people worldwide and is increasingly recognised as a field that has not received as much attention as it deserves,' says Tufts President Sunil Kumar. "It is widely recognized that food choices and nutrition play a critical role in preventing, managing, and treating diseases, and continuous research and discovery optimises care," says Christina Economos, Dean of Tufts' Gerald J and Dorothy R Friedman School of Nutrition Science and Policy.'We envision a multifaceted and flexible approach to training that equips all emerging physician-scientists and health researchers with a strong foundation in nutrition science,' she CENTRE THAT COULD CHANGE IT ALLAt the core of this partnership is the proposed Interdisciplinary Centre for Nutrition Science and Medicine (ICNSM), which will be housed at the upcoming Tata IISc Medical School. It will combine the strengths of both institutions -- Tufts' leadership in global nutrition policy and IISc's scientific rigour and tech expertise.'This partnership can provide a platform for discovering disruptive scientific, public health, and systems-level solutions that can catalyse innovative nutritional intervention strategies and policy changes,' says Govindan Rangarajan, Director of IISc. The centre will focus on nutrition research across disciplines -- from cancer and cardiovascular disease to immunity, gut health, ageing, and AI-powered dietary tech. It will also look at cultural factors shaping diets, including India's diverse food AS MEDICINE, NOT AFTERTHOUGHTWhat's making this alliance especially urgent is the global health reality: most diseases today aren't from viruses or bacteria, but from how we live and hypertension, diabetes, and fatty liver disease are rising sharply in India. But paradoxically, child malnutrition and micronutrient deficiencies remain to Dr Rangarajan, 'Every third child is stunted, and more than 50% of children under 5 years of age are anaemic.' At the same time, India is the global capital of diabetes with over 100 million diabetics and 136 million dual burden -- undernutrition and overnutrition -- demands a more sophisticated, localised approach to food as medicine. The IISc–Tufts centre will tackle just anticipate research that will impact our understanding of the role of nutrition in areas like ageing, cancer, obesity, and infectious diseases,' adds Sunil WHAT MEDICAL EDUCATION MISSEDOne key goal of the centre is curriculum change. Nutrition competencies will be woven into the training of physicians and researchers at IISc, creating a new generation of health professionals who treat food not as an afterthought, but a first-line tool. 'Physicians may graduate without the tools or confidence to advocate for or partner with dieticians,' says Economos. 'Medical training often emphasises drugs and surgery, rather than preventing and managing illness through diet. We see this as an area of opportunity.'The centre also plans joint PhD programmes, visiting scholars, and nutrition courses co-developed by Tufts' Friedman School and FEELINGS AND OLD WISDOMInterestingly, the project doesn't dismiss traditional health systems. In fact, it plans to harmonise cutting-edge gut microbiome research with Ayurvedic concepts like 'food as medicine'.advertisement'We hope to co-develop nutritional aspects unique to Indian culture,' says Dr Rangarajan. 'Traditional knowledge systems will be incorporated where applicable.'This approach respects the unique challenges of food habits and health in India -- a country where rice, roti, fermented foods, fasting, and feast all play a role in how people SENSORS AND PERSONALISED CAREBeyond diets and doctors, this centre also aims to bring technology into nutrition. Sensors, AI, and tele-nutrition will play a big role -- especially in low-resource settings where access to specialists is limited.'Researchers are discovering new ways to monitor a person's health and provide actionable, individualised data in real time,' says Sunil Kumar. 'This is a promising area of investigation.'There's also a plan to develop a tele-nutrition system that delivers real-time nutrition insights to primary care workers -- a game-changer for rural and underserved communities. BEYOND THE CLINIC: ACCESS, AFFORDABILITY, AND FOOD JUSTICEOf course, no amount of tech or research will matter if healthy food isn't accessible. That's why the partnership isn't just about calories or vitamins -- it's about areas with high levels of poverty and poor access to healthy food, obesity, diabetes and other chronic diseases are much higher than average,' says Economos. 'By tackling food access and differentiated health burdens, we can improve outcomes.'This lens is especially relevant in India, where urban poor populations often rely on ultra-processed, low-nutrition food due to cost or focusing on food affordability, cultural eating habits, and the economics of supply chains, the centre aims to reshape healthcare at a structural level -- not just the THINGS THIS PROJECT DOES:Builds a new centre at IISc focused on nutrition science and integrative medicineEquips future doctors with real-world nutrition trainingUses AI and tele-nutrition to expand access in low-resource areas At the heart of it, this collaboration is based on a simple truth: what we eat doesn't just affect how we feel -- it determines how we live. And now, finally, science and medicine are catching Economos puts it, 'Nutrition plays a critical role in the prevention, management, and treatment of both communicable and non-communicable diseases. Ongoing research and discovery are essential to optimising care.'This time, the prescription might just begin at your plate.- Ends

A Tufts alum completed a fellowship. Lesson learned: he's related to his alma mater's founder.
A Tufts alum completed a fellowship. Lesson learned: he's related to his alma mater's founder.

Boston Globe

time01-06-2025

  • General
  • Boston Globe

A Tufts alum completed a fellowship. Lesson learned: he's related to his alma mater's founder.

In a way, the genealogical discovery has reinforced his career goals. He's pursuing a master's in history at the University of Virginia in the fall, with a focus on African American life during the Unlike many African Americans, Mosley grew up knowing some things about his family roots. He has many fond memories visiting the Lang Syne Plantation in South Carolina, where descendants of the people who labored on and around the land gather every other year to recognize their ancestors' legacies. Here, the seeds for his lifelong interest in genealogy were planted. Advertisement 'I was always interested in who my ancestors were, what their experiences were,' Mosley said. One branch of his family tree is somewhat documented. The Lang Syne Plantation is a historic landmark. Some characters in Scarlet Sister Mary , a 1929 Pulitzer Prize-winning novel about the Gullah people, are loosely based on a handful of his ancestors. Advertisement Mosley gained some research skills to supplement his family tree through the Within the program, students receive opportunities to learn about the communities that contributed to Tufts' legacy. 'That kind of place-based learning is really phenomenal, and creates all sorts of connections and opportunities that might otherwise be unavailable,' Field said. As a descendant of enslaved people in America, Mosley had a hunch that white people made up some branches of his family tree. But the documents available to him couldn't explain how. 'If you're doing African American genealogy in America, it's very difficult to get past that wall of slavery,' said John Hannigan, archivist and project manager for the SCL initiative. DNA filled in the gaps, Hannigan said, and 'opened up the entire realm ... back to the 17th century.' Mosley took an Jabez Weeks, a white overseer on the Lang Syne Plantation where Mosley's enslaved ancestors labored. Jabez Weeks and Mary Green, an enslaved woman, had a son, Mosley's fourth great-grandfather James. Once Mosley corroborated this, he worked backwards. He followed the paper trail of census records, estate records, and written genealogies his white ancestors left behind. He traced Jabez's lineage into North Carolina, into Falmouth, and finally landed with the Tufts family. Advertisement Mosley's family tree, like so many others, is long and hard to follow. But it goes something like this: Mary Lynde is Mosley's 12th great-grandmother. Sometime in the 17th century, her brother, Thomas Lynde, married Elizabeth Tufts, whose father is Peter Tufts Sr. Some 200 years later, Charles Tufts, one of Peter's descendants, would donate 100 acres straddling Medford and Somerville to a group of members from the Universalist Church to build what would later become Tufts University. Photo of Mary Weeks Bryant taken from a family album. A character from the 1929 Pulitzer-Prize winning novel Scarlet Sister Mary was loosely based on Bryant. (Jaiden Mosley) Jaiden Mosley Thus, 'the Tufts family are like my cousins,' Mosley said. When he made the connection, Mosley looked at his computer in shock. 'I'm caught up in my Blackness and my 'southerness,'' Mosley said. 'I didn't think I had any type of relation to New England, Boston, or Tufts.' Mosley's genealogical discovery adds more nuance to Tufts' legacy, said Heather Curtis, the director of the Center for the Humanities at Tufts. 'There's this sense that any school founded in the 1850s in the North would have nothing to do with slavery except for opposing it,' Curtis, a professor who is also a principal investigator for SCL, said. But 'just because we are in the North doesn't mean that the school and the Tufts family were not intricately intertwined with the slave trade and the slave economy.' Mosley's family story, Curtis said, is an 'incredible story' that captures some of these complexities. As Mosley pieced together his Tufts roots, he said he's had to grapple with shameful parts of his ancestors' pasts. One owned roughly 40 enslaved people. When the Civil War broke out, Jabez Weeks enlisted in the Confederate Army. Advertisement A pedestrian walked on the Tufts University Campus in Medford. Craig F. Walker/Globe Staff On top of this, Mosley had to face a harsh reality: his connection to the Tufts family is most likely a product of sexual violence, a product of the one-sided power dynamic between white overseers and enslaved women in the American South. 'It's ugly history, but nonetheless, they are my ancestors,' Mosley said. When Mosley put the pieces of his family tree together, he did think about As Mosley learns more of his Tufts relatives, he hopes the contributions of his Black ancestors aren't overshadowed. His ancestors helped build a school for formerly enslaved children near where their plantation once stood. James Weeks, his fourth-great grandfather, helped organize African American voters during Reconstruction, and was supposedly lynched for his bravery. And at least two enslaved men ran away from their plantations and joined the Union Army. These stories are oral histories, family lore that Mosley has yet to support with evidence, but nonetheless stories that shape his sense of self. When exploring your family history, Mosley said, 'Just be open to the ugly, the interesting, the bad, the diverse experiences.' Tufts wasn't Mosley's first choice. But he believes in fate. 'I think I was meant to go here,' he said. Tiana Woodard can be reached at

Where things stand in 5 of the Trump administration's highest profile immigration cases
Where things stand in 5 of the Trump administration's highest profile immigration cases

CNN

time12-05-2025

  • Politics
  • CNN

Where things stand in 5 of the Trump administration's highest profile immigration cases

Donald Trump Immigration The Middle East Student lifeFacebookTweetLink Follow Over the weekend, an international university student facing deportation by the Trump administration was allowed to return to her home in the US while her case continues to play out in court, marking a victory for one of the many cases involving students who could be removed from the country after participating in pro-Palestinian activism. Tufts University PhD student Rümeysa Öztürk spent 45 days in a detention center more than 1,500 miles from that home, accused by federal authorities of participating in pro-terrorist activities. The judge who ordered Öztürk's release emphasized the administration's failure to submit any evidence to support that accusation throughout her lengthy detention. Öztürk's case is one in a series of arrests targeting international students involved in pro-Palestinian activism that has sparked widespread concerns about free speech on university grounds. It's been two months since Immigration and Customs Enforcement began targeting students and scholars in often dramatic arrests by masked officers, leaving the international community on edge about their most fundamental rights. Here's where Öztürk's and four other prominent cases stand. On March 25, Öztürk, a 30-year-old Turkish national, was seized by masked federal agents near her Somerville, Massachusetts, apartment close to the Tufts University campus, where she is a PhD student. On her way to an Iftar dinner at sunset, Öztürk was surrounded and restrained by six plainclothes officers. Video shows her shriek in fear when an officer in a hooded sweatshirt and hat grabbed her by the wrists. The officers did not show their badges until after she was restrained, the video shows. Öztürk was arrested a year after co-authoring a campus newspaper op-ed critical of Tufts' response to the Gaza war, which her attorneys argue made her a target of the administration's efforts to suppress pro-Palestinian speech in violation of her constitutional rights. Transported across multiple states before finally being detained in Louisiana, Öztürk endured more frequent and more severe asthma attacks while in custody, she testified in court Friday. At a three-hour hearing, US District Judge William K. Sessions III also heard from three other witnesses about Öztürk's community work and her asthma attacks, which her attorneys say were not adequately treated while she was in custody. The judge found Öztürk had raised 'substantial claims' of due process and First Amendment violations, saying her 'continued detention potentially chills the speech of millions.' Sessions emphasized that for weeks, the government failed to produce any evidence to support Öztürk's continued detention, except for the year-old op-ed. 'That is literally the case,' the judge said. 'There is no evidence here as to the motivation absent the consideration of the op-ed.' Now back in Massachusetts, Öztürk remains hopeful as she resumes her studies while continuing her legal fight. 'America is the greatest democracy in the world, and I believe in those values that we share. I have faith in the American system of justice,' Öztürk said at a news conference at the airport. The decision to release Öztürk came on the same day that a federal court rejected the Trump administration's attempt to re-arrest another international student who was detained last month. Moshen Mahdawi, a 34-year-old student and prominent activist at Columbia University, spent more than two weeks in detention before he was freed on bond on April 30. In pushing for Mahdawi's deportation, the Trump administration has argued that his activism undermines its foreign policy goals. The federal judge who ordered Mahdawi's release found that the Columbia student has presented a 'substantial claim' that his arrest was an attempt to suppress dissenting speech. Mahdawi is Palestinian, born and raised in a refugee camp in the West Bank. He moved to the US in 2014 and became a permanent resident. He was in an interview to finalize his US citizenship when federal authorities took him into custody on April 14, in what Mahdawi has described as 'a setup.' Mahdawi credited his legal team's swift action – and good timing – for limiting his time in detention. Federal authorities tried to put him on a plane to Louisiana, similar to Öztürk, but they 'just missed the airplane … by nine minutes,' he told a crowd of supporters after his release last month. He also vowed to maintain his activism, telling supporters, 'Where (do) we go from this? We have to mobilize. We have to organize.' Last week Mahdawi helped launch a $1 million fundraising campaign to bolster a legal safety net for immigrants in Vermont, where his legal case is continuing, the Associated Press reported. Badar Khan Suri, an Indian national and Georgetown University doctoral fellow specializing in peacebuilding in the Middle East, has been in federal detention for nearly two months after his J-1 visa was abruptly revoked. According to his legal team, immigration officers arrived at his home on March 17 wearing black masks and 'brandishing weapons,' in what one of his attorneys called 'every family's worst nightmare.' About two days after the arrest, the Department of Homeland Security accused Khan Suri of 'actively spreading Hamas propaganda and promoting antisemitism on social media,' and having 'close connections to a known or suspected terrorist.' As in Mahdawi's and similar cases, the Trump administration cited a perceived threat to the nation's foreign policy goals as the reason for his visa being revoked. Khan Suri's attorneys argue the accusations stem from the public support his Palestinian wife, who is a US citizen, has expressed for Gaza during the war with Israel. His father-in-law is a former adviser to Hamas leadership, but Khan Suri's legal team rejects the administration's accusation that this constitutes a 'close tie to a known and suspected terrorist.' Legal filings in Khan Suri's case describe bleak detention conditions. His attorneys said he was being housed 'in a crowded unit, sleeping on the floor' and was given no religious accommodations for Ramadan in March. The prolonged detention has also disrupted his academic career. Khan Suri's scholarship, research and teaching position at Georgetown have all been 'indefinitely suspended,' according to his bond motion, though the university has indicated he could resume his position if his visa is restored. On Wednesday, a federal judge will consider Khan Suri's request to be released on bond during a hearing in Virginia. Harvard Medical School researcher Kseniia Petrova, a Russian national, describes herself as a 'nerdy 30-year-old scientist' who 'only want(s) to be in the lab.' The Department of Homeland Security accuses her of lying to federal officials and deliberately trying to smuggle frog embryo samples into the US from Paris. She's been in an ICE detention center in Louisiana for nearly three months. In a statement this month, Petrova admitted that she failed to review US customs protocols but said she believed the embryos – 'non-toxic, non-hazardous and non-infectious' – would not cause issues. She insists she 'never provided false information to any government official' but rather that 'some of my words were misunderstood and inaccurately reflected in the statement that the officer presented for my signature.' Petrova claims her requests to correct the statement were ignored. 'I take full responsibility for not properly declaring the frog embryo samples,' Petrova said. 'What I do not understand is why the American officials say I am a danger to the community and a flight risk.' DHS defended Petrova's detention in a statement last month that mocks sympathetic media coverage of those targeted in the administration's immigration efforts. The statement says messages were found on Petrova's phone that 'revealed she planned to smuggle the materials through customs without declaring them.' Petrova's case appears to reflect the Trump administration's systematic approach of using minor offenses as a basis for deportation. The targeting of a highly skilled scientific research also highlights what critics say the US stands to lose in Trump's crackdown. 'She has made herself crucial to pretty much every project that's going on in the lab. I don't know how we're gonna continue without her,' a principal research scientist at Harvard's Department of Systems Biology said of Petrova. Petrova's detention has drawn support from colleagues, who have sent her science books and letters of encouragement, with some visiting her in Louisiana. A court hearing in Vermont later this month could determine whether Petrova will be released – or deported to Russia, where she risks arrest for her opposition to the war in Ukraine, her attorney says. Born a Palestinian refugee in Syria, Columbia University graduate and US permanent resident Mahmoud Khalil emerged in early March as the face of the Trump administration's crackdown on campus activism by international students. Khalil, who played a prominent role in pro-Palestinian protests at Columbia last summer, was arrested near his on-campus home – where he lived with his then-pregnant wife – on March 8 after being accused of engaging in activities in support of Hamas. Khalil, 30, is being held in an ICE detention facility in Jena, Louisiana, more than 1,000 miles from his family. Last month he was denied permission to attend the birth of first child in person, according to emails reviewed by CNN. An immigration judge in Louisiana ruled in April that Khalil is subject to removal from the US, but his attorneys are appealing that and challenging his detention in a separate federal case in New Jersey that argues he is being targeted for constitutionally protected free speech. Last week a judge in the New Jersey case asked the Trump administration to give examples of previous instances when the government deported people deemed to be a threat to US foreign policy. President Trump called Khalil's detention in March 'the first arrest of many to come.' How the Palestinian activist's legal case plays out could have major implications for those detained after him. CNN's Gloria Pazmino, Rebekah Riess, Dalia Faheid, Polo Sandoval, Kaanita Iyer, Piper Hudspeth Blackburn, Aishwarya S Iyer, Chris Boyette, Lauren del Valle, Jeff Winter, Amanda Musa, Ray Sanchez and Taylor Romine contributed to this report.

Where things stand in 5 of the Trump administration's highest profile immigration cases
Where things stand in 5 of the Trump administration's highest profile immigration cases

Yahoo

time12-05-2025

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

Where things stand in 5 of the Trump administration's highest profile immigration cases

Over the weekend, an international university student facing deportation by the Trump administration was allowed to return to her home in the US while her case continues to play out in court, marking a victory for one of the many cases involving students who could be removed from the country after participating in pro-Palestinian activism. Tufts University PhD student Rümeysa Öztürk spent 45 days in a detention center more than 1,500 miles from that home, accused by federal authorities of participating in pro-terrorist activities. The judge who ordered Öztürk's release emphasized the administration's failure to submit any evidence to support that accusation throughout her lengthy detention. Öztürk's case is one in a series of arrests targeting international students involved in pro-Palestinian activism that has sparked widespread concerns about free speech on university grounds. It's been two months since Immigration and Customs Enforcement began targeting students and scholars in often dramatic arrests by masked officers, leaving the international community on edge about their most fundamental rights. Here's where Ozturk's and four other prominent cases stand. On March 25, Öztürk, a 30-year-old Turkish national, was seized by masked federal agents near her Somerville, Massachusetts, apartment close to the Tufts University campus, where she is a PhD student. On her way to an Iftar dinner at sunset, six plainclothes officers surrounded and restrained her, as captured in video, which shows her screaming in terror. The officers did not show their badges until after she was restrained, video shows. Öztürk was arrested a year after co-authoring a campus newspaper op-ed critical of Tufts' response to the Gaza war, which her attorneys argue made her a target of the administration's efforts to suppress pro-Palestinian speech in violation of her constitutional rights. Transported across multiple states before finally being detained in Louisiana, Öztürk endured more frequent and more severe asthma attacks while in custody, she testified in court Friday. At a three-hour hearing, US District Judge William K. Sessions III also heard from three other witnesses about Öztürk's community work and her asthma attacks, which her attorneys say were not adequately treated while she was in custody. The judge found Öztürk had raised 'substantial claims' of due process and First Amendment violations, saying her 'continued detention potentially chills the speech of millions.' Sessions emphasized that for weeks, the government failed to produce any evidence to support Öztürk's continued detention, except for the year-old op-ed. 'That is literally the case,' the judge said. 'There is no evidence here as to the motivation absent the consideration of the op-ed.' Now back in Massachusetts, Öztürk remains hopeful as she resumes her studies while continuing her legal fight. 'America is the greatest democracy in the world, and I believe in those values that we share. I have faith in the American system of justice,' Öztürk said at a news conference at the airport. The decision to release Öztürk came on the same day that a federal court rejected the Trump administration's attempt to re-arrest another international student who was detained last month. Moshen Mahdawi, a 34-year-old student and prominent activist at Columbia University, spent more than two weeks in detention before he was freed on bond on April 30. In pushing for Mahdawi's deportation, the Trump administration has argued that his activism undermines its foreign policy goals. The federal judge who ordered Mahdawi's release found that the Columbia student has presented a 'substantial claim' that his arrest was an attempt to suppress dissenting speech. Mahdawi is Palestinian, born and raised in a refugee camp in the West Bank. He moved to the US in 2014 and became a permanent resident. He was in an interview to finalize his US citizenship when federal authorities took him into custody on April 14, in what Mahdawi has described as 'a setup.' Mahdawi credited his legal team's swift action – and good timing – for limiting his time in detention. Federal authorities tried to put him on a plane to Louisiana, similar to Öztürk, but they 'just missed the airplane … by nine minutes,' he told a crowd of supporters after his release last month. He also vowed to maintain his activism, telling supporters, 'Where (do) we go from this? We have to mobilize. We have to organize.' Last week Mahdawi helped launch a $1 million fundraising campaign to bolster a legal safety net for immigrants in Vermont, where his legal case is continuing, the Associated Press reported. Badar Khan Suri, an Indian national and Georgetown University doctoral fellow specializing in peacebuilding in the Middle East, has been in federal detention for nearly two months after his J-1 visa was abruptly revoked. According to his legal team, immigration officers arrived at his home on March 17 wearing black masks and 'brandishing weapons,' in what one of his attorneys called 'every family's worst nightmare.' About two days after the arrest, the Department of Homeland Security accused Khan Suri of 'actively spreading Hamas propaganda and promoting antisemitism on social media,' and having 'close connections to a known or suspected terrorist.' As in Mahdawi's and similar cases, the Trump administration cited a perceived threat to the nation's foreign policy goals as the reason for his visa being revoked. Khan Suri's attorneys argue the accusations stem from the public support his Palestinian wife, who is a US citizen, has expressed for Gaza during the war with Israel. His father-in-law is a former adviser to Hamas leadership, but Khan Suri's legal team rejects the administration's accusation that this constitutes a 'close tie to a known and suspected terrorist.' Legal filings in Khan Suri's case describe bleak detention conditions. His attorneys said he was being housed 'in a crowded unit, sleeping on the floor' and was given no religious accommodations for Ramadan in March. The prolonged detention has also disrupted his academic career. Khan Suri's scholarship, research and teaching position at Georgetown have all been 'indefinitely suspended,' according to his bond motion, though the university has indicated he could resume his position if his visa is restored. On Wednesday, a federal judge will consider Khan Suri's request to be released on bond during a hearing in Virginia. Harvard Medical School researcher Kseniia Petrova, a Russian national, describes herself as a 'nerdy 30-year-old scientist' who 'only want(s) to be in the lab.' The Department of Homeland Security accuses her of lying to federal officials and deliberately trying to smuggle frog embryo samples into the US from Paris. She's been in an ICE detention center in Louisiana for nearly three months. In a statement this month, Petrova admitted that she failed to review US customs protocols but said she believed the embryos – 'non-toxic, non-hazardous and non-infectious' – would not cause issues. She insists she 'never provided false information to any government official' but rather that 'some of my words were misunderstood and inaccurately reflected in the statement that the officer presented for my signature.' Petrova claims her requests to correct the statement were ignored. 'I take full responsibility for not properly declaring the frog embryo samples,' Petrova said. 'What I do not understand is why the American officials say I am a danger to the community and a flight risk.' DHS defended Petrova's detention in a statement last month that mocks sympathetic media coverage of those targeted in the administration's immigration efforts. The statement says messages were found on Petrova's phone that 'revealed she planned to smuggle the materials through customs without declaring them.' Petrova's case appears to reflect the Trump administration's systematic approach of using minor offenses as a basis for deportation. The targeting of a highly skilled scientific research also highlights what critics say the US stands to lose in Trump's crackdown. 'She has made herself crucial to pretty much every project that's going on in the lab. I don't know how we're gonna continue without her,' a principal research scientist at Harvard's Department of Systems Biology said of Petrova. Petrova's detention has drawn support from colleagues, who have sent her science books and letters of encouragement, with some visiting her in Louisiana. A court hearing in Vermont later this month could determine whether Petrova will be released – or deported to Russia, where she risks arrest for her opposition to the war in Ukraine, her attorney says. Born a Palestinian refugee in Syria, Columbia University graduate and US permanent resident Mahmoud Khalil emerged in early March as the face of the Trump administration's crackdown on campus activism by international students. Khalil, who played a prominent role in pro-Palestinian protests at Columbia last summer, was arrested near his on-campus home – where he lived with his then-pregnant wife – on March 8 after being accused of engaging in activities in support of Hamas. Khalil, 30, is being held in an ICE detention facility in Jena, Louisiana, more than 1,000 miles from his family. Last month he was denied permission to attend the birth of first child in person, according to emails reviewed by CNN. An immigration judge in Louisiana ruled in April that Khalil is subject to removal from the US, but his attorneys are appealing that and challenging his detention in a separate federal case in New Jersey that argues he is being targeted for constitutionally protected free speech. Last week a judge in the New Jersey case asked the Trump administration to give examples of previous instances when the government deported people deemed to be a threat to US foreign policy. President Trump called Khalil's detention in March 'the first arrest of many to come.' How the Palestinian activist's legal case plays out could have major implications for those detained after him. CNN's Gloria Pazmino, Rebekah Riess, Dalia Faheid, Polo Sandoval, Kaanita Iyer, Piper Hudspeth Blackburn, Aishwarya S Iyer, Chris Boyette, Lauren del Valle, Jeff Winter, Amanda Musa, Ray Sanchez and Taylor Romine contributed to this report.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store