Israel expands Gaza City operations; residents told to move to safe zoneNew Foto - Israel expands Gaza City operations; residents told to move to safe zone

Israel's army called Saturday on Palestinians in Gaza City to move to a humanitarian area it designated in the south as it expanded its operationsin preparation for seizingthe famine-stricken city. Parts of the city, home to nearly 1 million people, are already considered "red zones," where evacuation orders have been issued ahead of expected heavy fighting. Aid groups have repeatedly warned that a large-scale evacuation of Gaza City would exacerbate thedire humanitarian crisis. Palestinians have been uprooted and displaced multiple times during the nearly two-year-long war, with many being too weak to move and having nowhere to go. Israeli military spokesperson Avichay Adraee wrote in X that the army declared Muwasi — a makeshift tent camp in southern Gaza Strip — a humanitarian area and urged everyone in the city, which it called a Hamas stronghold and specified as a combat zone, to leave. The army said they could travel in cars down a designated road without being searched. The military, in a statement, provided a map showing the area in Khan Younis that the humanitarian area encompasses, which includes the block where Nasser Hospital is located. The area around the hospital has been considered a red zone, though not the medical facility itself. Last week, Israelstruck the hospital, killing 22 people, includingMariam Dagga, who worked for The Associated Press and other media outlets. The hospital was not under evacuation. The designated safe zone would include field hospitals, water pipelines, food and tents, and relief efforts "will continue on an ongoing basis in cooperation with the U.N. and international organizations," the statement said. The United Nations couldn't be immediately reached for comment. Israeli forces have struck humanitarian areas throughout the war, including Muwasi, which they previously declared a safe zone, according to Gaza's Health Ministry. The evacuation order came a day after Israel struck a high-rise building in Gaza City, saying Hamas used it for surveillance, without providing evidence. The war started after Hamas-led terrorists killed around 1,200 people, mostly civilians, and abducted 251 people in their attack on southern Israel on Oct. 7, 2023. Forty-eight hostages remain in Gaza, with many released through ceasefires or other agreements. Israel believes about 20 are still alive, though thebodies of two hostages were recoveredduring a joint operation in late August. Israel's retaliatory offensive has killed more than 64,000 Palestinians, according to Gaza's Health Ministry, which does not say how many were civilians or combatants but says women and children make up around half the dead. The U.N. and independent experts consider it the most reliable source on war casualties. Israel disputes its figures but has not provided its own. Israel says the war will continue until all the hostages are returned and Hamas is disarmed, and that it will retainopen-ended security controlof the territory of some 2 million Palestinians. Hamas has said it will only release the remaining hostages in return for Palestinian prisoners, a lasting ceasefire and a full Israeli withdrawal from Gaza. "Lack of food, treatment and possibilities" Shamm Qudeih, a toddler who was photographed by Dagga and evacuated to Italy for treatment for severe malnutrition and a genetic metabolic disease, celebrated her second birthday in an Italian hospital this week. She was evacuated with her mother and 10-year-old sister. The Italian Foreign Ministry says 181 Palestinian children are being treated in Italy. A photo of Shamm in her mother's arms in Gaza went viral for the child's thin limbs, visible ribs and distressed face. Shamm weighed about nine pounds when she arrived at the Santobono Pausilipon Children's Hospital in Naples. The toddler was "in a serious and challenging clinical state," said Dr. Daniele de Brasi, a pediatric genetic disease specialist who is treating Shamm. De Brasi said "a big part" of her undernourishment was due to a genetic metabolic disease called glycogen storage disease, which interferes with the absorption of nutrients, particularly carbohydrates, and can cause muscle weakness and impede growth. The condition is primarily managed through a high-carbohydrate diet. Shamm's mother, Islam Qudeih, said that the family has moved more than a dozen times since the start of the war in Gaza. It has been a struggle to get proper medical care, she said. Doctors suspected Shamm had the rare condition, but could not test for it or treat it properly. Qudeih said her daughter's condition "became worse as a result of the lack of food, treatment and possibilities." Shamm now weighs just over 12 pounds, which is still no more than half of the median weight for a child her age, de Brasi said. Her current caloric intake is about 500 calories a day, which doctors are gradually increasing. A cornerstone of her diet is a carbohydrate-rich porridge. At night, a feeding tube ensures she gets the right mix of nutrients while she sleeps. Doctors hope to remove the tube in about a month. Shamm's sister Judi has also been treated by doctors after they noticed she was underweight, de Brasi said. Judi has gained about five pounds and is in condition. Qudeih said that she is allowing herself to experience relief as her daughters improve, but she can't imagine going back to Gaza, where Shamm's father remains. "Now there is no way to go back, as long as the war is going on. There are no possibilities for my daughters," Qudeih said. U.S. deploying 10 fighter jets to Puerto Rico in drug cartel crackdown Chicago-area Navy base to be used for immigration operations Reporter's Notebook: Can a manufacturing renaissance deliver for workers?

Israel expands Gaza City operations; residents told to move to safe zone

Israel expands Gaza City operations; residents told to move to safe zone Israel's army called Saturday on Palestinians in Gaza City to m...
Biden launches a fundraising push to build his presidential library in DelawareNew Foto - Biden launches a fundraising push to build his presidential library in Delaware

WASHINGTON (AP) — Former PresidentJoe Bidenhas decided to build his presidential library in Delaware and has tapped a group of former aides, friends and political allies to begin the heavy lift of fundraising and finding a site for the museum and archive. The Joe and Jill Biden Foundation this past week approved a 13-person governance board that is charged with steering the project. The board includes former Secretary of StateAntony Blinken, longtime adviserSteve Ricchetti,prolific Democratic fundraiser Rufus Gifford and others with deep ties to the one-term president and his wife. Biden's library team has the daunting task of raising money for the 46th president's legacy project at a moment when his party has become fragmented about the way ahead and manybig Democratic donors have stopped writing checks. It also remains to be seen whether corporations and institutional donors that have historically donated topresidential library projects— regardless of the party of the former president — will be more hesitant to contribute, with PresidentDonald Trumpmaligning Bidenon a daily basis and savaging groups he deems left-leaning. The political climate has changed "There's certainly folks — folks who may have been not thinking about those kinds of issues who are starting to think about them," Gifford, who was named chairman of the library board, told The Associated Press. "That being said ... we're not going to create a budget, we're not going to set a goal for ourselves that we don't believe we can hit." The cost of presidential libraries has soared over the decades. The George H.W. Bush library's construction cost came in at about $43 million when it opened in 1997. Bill Clinton's cost about $165 million. George W. Bush's team met its $500 million fundraising goal before the library was dedicated. The Obama Foundation has seta whopping $1.6 billion fundraising goalfor construction, sustaining global programming and seeding an endowment for the Chicago presidential center that is slated to open next year. Biden's library team is still in the early stages of planning, but Gifford predicted that the cost of the project would probably "end up somewhere in the middle" of the Obama Presidential Center and the George H.W. Bush Presidential Library and Museum. Biden advisers have met with officials operating 12 of the 13 presidential libraries with a bricks and mortar presence that the National Archives and Records Administration manages. (They skipped the Herbert Hoover library in Iowa, which is closed for renovations). They've also met Obama library officials to discuss programming and location considerations and have begun talks with Delaware leaders to assess potential partnerships. Private money builds them Construction and support for programming for the libraries are paid for with private funds donated to the nonprofit organizations established by the former president. The initial vision is for the Biden library to include an immersive museum detailing Biden's four years in office. The Bidens also want it to be a hub for leadership, service and civic engagement that will include educational and event space to host policy gatherings. Biden, who ended his bid for a second White House term 107 days before last year's election, has been relatively slow to move on presidential library planning compared with most of his recent predecessors. Clinton announced Little Rock, Arkansas, would host his library weeks into his second term. Barack Obama selected Jackson Park on Chicago's South Side as the site for his presidential center before he left office, and George W. Bush selected Southern Methodist University in Dallas before finishing his second term. One-termer George H.W. Bush announced in 1991, more than a year before he would lose his reelection bid, that he would establish his presidential library at Texas A&M University after he left office. Donald Trumptaps legal settlements for his Trump was mostly quiet aboutplans for a presidential libraryafter losing to Biden in 2020 and has remained so since his return to the White House this year. But the Republican has won millions of dollars in lawsuits againstParamount Global,ABC News, Meta and X in which parts of those settlements are directed for a future Trump library. Trump has also accepted a free Air Force One replacementfrom the Qatar government.He says the $400 million plane would be donated to his future presidential library, similar to how the Boeing 707 used by President Ronald Reagan was decommissioned and put on display as a museum piece, once he leaves office. Others named to Biden's library board are former senior White House aides Elizabeth Alexander, Julissa Reynoso Pantaleón andCedric Richmond; David Cohen, a former ambassador to Canada and telecom executive; Tatiana Brandt Copeland, a Delaware philanthropist; Jeff Peck, Biden Foundation treasurer and former Senate aide; Fred C. Sears II, Biden's longtime friend; former Labor Secretary Marty Walsh; former Office of Management and Budget director Shalanda Young; and former Delaware Gov. Jack Markell. Biden has deep ties to Pennsylvania but ultimately settled on Delaware, the state that was the launching pad for his political career. He was first elected to the New Castle County Council in 1970 and spent 36 years representing Delaware in the Senate before serving as Obama's vice president. The president was born inScranton, Pennsylvania,where he lived until age 10. He left when his father, struggling to make ends meet, moved the family to Delaware after landing a job there selling cars. Working-class Scranton became a touchstone in Biden's political narrative during his long political career. He also served as a professor at theUniversity of Pennsylvaniaafter his vice presidency, leading a center on diplomacy and global engagement at the school named after him. Gifford said ultimately the Bidens felt that Delaware was where the library should be because the state has "propelled his entire political career." Elected officials in Delaware are cheering Biden's move. "To Delaware, he will always be our favorite son," Gov. Matt Meyer said. "The new presidential library here in Delaware will give future generations the chance to see his story of resilience, family, and never forgetting your roots."

Biden launches a fundraising push to build his presidential library in Delaware

Biden launches a fundraising push to build his presidential library in Delaware WASHINGTON (AP) — Former PresidentJoe Bidenhas decided to bu...
Trump administration plans to deport Kilmar Abrego Garcia to EswatiniNew Foto - Trump administration plans to deport Kilmar Abrego Garcia to Eswatini

The Trump administration informedKilmar Abrego Garciaon Friday that it now plans to deport him to the tiny African nation of Eswatini, as he continues to fight efforts to re-deport him. In an email to the Maryland man, which was obtained by CNN, an Immigration and Customs Enforcement official said that given Abrego Garcia's concerns about being deported to several other countries, they now seek to remove him to Eswatini. The Department of Homeland Security previously notified Abrego Garcia of plans todeport him to Uganda, but he objected to the removal, citing fears of being persecuted or tortured. "That claim of fear is hard to take seriously, especially given that you have claimed (through your attorneys) that you fear persecution or torture in at least 22 different countries," read the email, which listed the countries, including his home country of El Salvador, where he spent weeks in a notorious mega prison earlier this year after he was mistakenly deported. "Nonetheless, we hereby notify you that your new country of removal is Eswatini, Africa," the email added. An ICE official confirmed that Abrego Garcia will be deported to Eswatini, telling CNN, "TRUE: An immigration judge ordered him removed and ICE will comply with that order." Abrego Garcia is currently in ICE custody after being brought back to the US to face human smuggling charges, but the Trump administration is trying to quickly deport him again, even before the trial concludes. Last week, the federal judge overseeing Abrego Garcia's case ruled that hecannot be deported until at least early October,after Trump administration officials are expected to testify about the government's efforts to re-deport him. Abrego Garcia has said he prefers to be sent to Costa Rica, a country that has said it would be willing to give him some form of legal status should he be sent there. The administration previously offered to eventually deport Abrego Garcia to Costa Rica in exchange for a guilty plea, his lawyers told the judge overseeing his human trafficking case last month. However, Abrego Garcia did not accept the offer, according to a source familiar with his case. Eswatini— formerly known as Swaziland — is located in Southeast Africa and is roughly the size of New Jersey. Governed by a monarch who has absolute power, Eswatini is one of four African countries that have struck a deal with the Trump administration to receive foreign deportees, along with Rwanda, South Sudan andUganda. Abrego Garcia is also separately seeking torenew his bid for asylum, a process that will play out before an immigration judge within the Justice Department. CNN's Devan Cole contributed to this report. For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

Trump administration plans to deport Kilmar Abrego Garcia to Eswatini

Trump administration plans to deport Kilmar Abrego Garcia to Eswatini The Trump administration informedKilmar Abrego Garciaon Friday that it...
Judges keep blocking the president's agenda. Are Trump's mass deportation plans at risk?New Foto - Judges keep blocking the president's agenda. Are Trump's mass deportation plans at risk?

President Donald Trump has suffered three major legal setbacks in recent days that experts say could put his plans for mass deportation at risk – at least until a higher court steps in. Over the week bridging August and September, federal judges in separate cases have ruled against the president's immigration enforcement tactics and sided with immigrant advocates who have challenged their legality. Judges blocked the deportation of some migrant children who crossed the border alone; forbade the rapid removal of immigrants who have been in the country for more than two years; and stopped the administration's use of an arcane law to deport alleged gang members without due process. Trump administration officials and supporters have slammed the decisions of so-called "activist judges" who they say are overstepping their authority to prevent the president's enforcement of the nation's immigration laws. The one-two-three judicial punches could risk the president's plans to deport as many as 1 million people per year. The final decision in each of the cases likely lies with theSupreme Court, though, and "the Trump administration has tended to fare much better at the Supreme Court than in the lower courts," said Michael Kagan, director of the University of Nevada-Las Vegas Immigration Clinic. On Friday, Aug. 29, Judge Jia M. Cobb of the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia put the administration's fast-track deportations on hold, saying the use of "expedited removal" in the interior violated immigrants' due process rights. The White House has sought to speed up the deportation process to reduce the time from arrest to deportation. The idea being: the faster the process, the higher the rate of removals. Cobb called it a "skimpy process" that could put not only noncitizens but everyone at risk. "When it comes to people living in the interior of the country, prioritizing speed over all else will inevitably lead the Government to erroneously remove people via this truncated process,"she wrote in her opinion. On Sunday, Aug. 31, also in the DC district court, Judge Sparkle L. Sooknanan issued a temporary restraining order prohibiting ICE from deportingGuatemalan childrenwho came to the country without a parent or guardian. The childrenwere already aboard deportation planes in El Pasoand Harlingen, Texas, when the National Immigration Law Center filed a request for an emergency injunction. Then, on Sept. 2, a majority of federal appellate judges in the famously conservative Fifth Circuit Court of Appealsrejected Trump's use of the Alien Enemies Act of 1798to rapidly deport people accused of being members of a violent Venezuelan prison gang. Back in March, Trumphad invoked the law, saying that the gang known as Tren de Aragua was "undertaking hostile actions and conducting irregular warfare" against the United States. In a 2-to-1 decision, Judge Leslie H. Southwick said there is no evidence that mass immigration in recent years constituted "an armed, organized force or forces." The judges concluded that the Alien Enemies Act "was improperly invoked." Trump officials and supporters of the administration's immigration crackdown disagreed with the judges' findings. After the "alien enemies" ruling, Trump aide Stephen Miller said "the judicial coup continues," ina post on the social media site X. Broadly, the rulings take "real leaps of logic that seem aimed at preventing a president from enforcing immigration law written by Congress," said Jessica Vaughan, director of policy studies for the Center for Immigration Studies. Even without the judicial obstacles, the Trump administration has an uphill road to its deportation goals. U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement has deported roughly 200,000 people since Trump took office, according to agency data. Neither Democrat nor Republican administrations have ever successfullydeported 1 million people per year, not including quick returns at the U.S.-Mexico border, according to the Office of Homeland Security Statistics. It's been harder for the Trump administration to quickly drive up deportation and removal numbers, in part because illegal border crossings have dropped to record lows. "People don't appreciate that deportation is quite a lot of work for the government, and the government has often had a hard time working it out," Kagan said. Lauren Villagran can be reached at lvillagran@usatoday.com. The three judges on the famously conservative appeals court disagreed alleged gang members without due process. Trump made a presidential proclamation in March filing lawsuits to stop the deportation of children who crossed the border alone "expedited removal" or There are two major thrusts in what the Trump administration is trying to do: one is to find as many ways as possible to grab and deport people without any due process at all; the other front line is the TA wants to be able to detain people for as long as possible until they are deported, which they know will lead many people to give up their cases The enforcement ramp-up The administration's immigration crackdown is flush with cash after Congress approved billions in new funding this summer. A hiring spree by ICE has netted The Trump administration's immigration crackdown has run into new judicial roadblocks that could threaten the president's plans to deport millions of noncitizens. experts say. wo federal appeals court judges, in separate cases, forbid the administration from The lead plaintiff in the case, L.G.M.L, is an indigenous girl whose mother passed away and who suffered abuse and neglect at the hands of other family members in Guatemala This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Federal judges block Trump mass deportation tactics

Judges keep blocking the president's agenda. Are Trump's mass deportation plans at risk?

Judges keep blocking the president's agenda. Are Trump's mass deportation plans at risk? President Donald Trump has suffered three m...
Trump backs Kennedy on vaccines despite health, political risksNew Foto - Trump backs Kennedy on vaccines despite health, political risks

By Jeff Mason WASHINGTON (Reuters) -President Donald Trump is standing by Robert F. Kennedy Jr., the health secretary who is upending the U.S. healthcare system, despite congressional pressure, public health concerns and the political risks of changing vaccine policies nationwide. Since becoming the top U.S. health official, Kennedy has slashed funding for vaccine research, limited access for COVID-19 shots and ousted the head of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, which makes U.S. vaccine recommendations. The consequences of those changes for Americans and their wellness are vast, public health professionals warn. They also carry possible political peril: If an outbreak of an infectious disease occurs after vaccination rates go down, Trump could be blamed. But the president so far has been steadfast in his support for Kennedy, according to sources familiar with their relationship, underscoring Trump's willingness to take a proverbial sledgehammer to the U.S. healthcare system, just as he has to academia, the law, the media and other institutions throughout U.S. society. "He's a, a very good person ... and he means very well, and he's got some little different ideas," Trump told reporters on Thursday at the White House after lawmakers grilled Kennedy at a hearing earlier in the day. "If you look at what's going on in the world with health, and look at this country also with regard to health, I like the fact that he's different." Trump and Kennedy speak regularly, though not as often as the president does with some other cabinet officials, a White House official said. They don't share the same passion, the official added, but Trump has the secretary's back. "He doesn't feel as strongly as Bobby on some of these key issues," the official said. "He trusts his judgment." Trump rewarded Kennedy with the Health and Human Services job after drawing support from the Kennedy-inspired Make America Healthy Again movement in the 2024 election. Kennedy, who hails from one of the country's most famous political dynasties, briefly ran for president as a Democrat and an independent before dropping out to endorse Trump. In December, Trump played down the potential for the longtime vaccine critic to make extreme change. "I think he's going to be much less radical than you would think," the then-president-elect told reporters at Mar-a-Lago, his Palm Beach, Florida estate. "I think he's got a very open mind, or I wouldn't have put him there." IT'S COMPLICATED Trump's own views on vaccines are complicated. Though he can claim credit for speeding up development of the life-saving COVID-19 vaccines during his first term, he has been reluctant to embrace them, given the antipathy of his political base toward vaccines and the broader response to the pandemic. Florida leaders announced a plan on Wednesday to end all state vaccine mandates, including for students to attend schools. Trump seemed to question that, gently, on Friday. "Look, you have some vaccines that are so amazing. The polio vaccine, I happen to think is amazing," he told reporters in the Oval Office. "You have to be very careful when you say that some people don't have to be vaccinated ... It's a very tough position." While Democrats have become more trusting of vaccines in recent years, Republicans appear less so, according to Reuters/Ipsos polling. Some 75% of Democrats in May said they considered vaccines for diseases like measles, mumps, and rubella to be "very safe" for children, up from 64% in a Reuters/Ipsos poll conducted in May 2020. The share of Republicans saying the same fell to 41% in May of this year from 57% five years earlier. Trump is attuned to that political dynamic and has reacted accordingly, said Marc Short, who helped lead the administration's pandemic response plan during Trump's first term as Vice President Mike Pence's chief of staff. He noted there were risks for Kennedy, though, if things went badly. "If there's something that the president views as embarrassing to him, he has a unique capacity to kind of cut bait and go a different direction," Short said. The president recently posted on social media that vaccine companies should prove their products saved millions of lives. That data exists, though there are skeptics. A Yale study showed that from December 2020 to November 2022, COVID-19 vaccines prevented "more than 18.5 million additional hospitalizations and 3.2 million additional deaths" in the United States. NOT ENOUGH CREDIT Reflecting Trump's ambivalence on the issue, the White House official said the president does not feel he gets enough credit for Operation Warp Speed, the program his prior administration spearheaded to spur vaccine development. Democratic and Republican lawmakers sharply criticized Kennedy during a tumultuous hearing on Thursday that highlighted bipartisan discomfort with the health secretary's leadership. Kennedy's suggestion that Trump receive a Nobel Prize for his efforts went over well with the president, according to the White House official, while Republican support for Operation Warp Speed muted the sting of their criticism of Kennedy. Strong voter support for vaccines appeared to be on the mind of at least one Republican senator on Thursday. The office of John Barrasso, a physician, confirmed he was citing data at the hearing from Trump's polling firm, Fabrizio-Ward, showing 89% of all voters and 81% of Trump voters agreeing that vaccine recommendations should come from trained physicians, scientists and public health experts. Trump's Republican allies and members of the administration, including Vice President JD Vance, took to social media to criticize lawmakers who had grilled the health secretary. "You're full of shit and everyone knows it," Vance said on X. Some public health officials suggest the political alliance Trump has formed with Kennedy - and the leeway the president is giving him - is leading to dire consequences. "They made a marriage of convenience and now it's a marriage that's going to have unprecedented and disastrous results for public health, healthcare and biomedical research," said Gregg Gonsalves, an associate professor of epidemiology at the Yale School of Public Health, who complimented Trump's Operation Warp Speed as a "tremendous" victory. (Reporting by Jeff Mason; additional reporting by Jason Lange, Trevor Hunnicutt, David Morgan and Jarrett RenshawEditing by Colleen Jenkins and Alistair Bell)

Trump backs Kennedy on vaccines despite health, political risks

Trump backs Kennedy on vaccines despite health, political risks By Jeff Mason WASHINGTON (Reuters) -President Donald Trump is standing by R...

 

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