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Trump Administration Escalates Deportations Amid Congressional Concerns Over Afghan Man’s Detainment Post Green Card Appointment


Afghan man moving to US seized by immigration agents after green card application appointment

The Trump administration is continuing its deportations policy, which has been described as “human trafficking disguised as a deportation deal” by the largest opposition party in Eswatini. Civil society and opposition groups expressed outrage after the US deported five men to the country. You can read our full story here.

Attorneys and members of Congress have also told how an Afghan man who moved to America after working for the US military in his home country was seized by armed, masked immigration agents, put in a van and taken out of state. Identified only as Zia by members of Congress and his attorney out of concern for his safety and that of his family, the man had worked as an interpreter for the military during the war in Afghanistan. He was in the United States legally and was arrested after an appointment in Connecticut related to his application for a green card.

In other news:

  • Bryan Kohberger, 30, a former criminal-justice doctoral student, faces life in prison without the possibility of parole or appeal under a deal with prosecutors that spared him the death penalty in return for his guilty plea to four counts of first-degree murder. The proceedings today in a county courtroom in Boise, the state capital, also will afford family members the chance to directly address Kohberger through the presentation of victim impact statements.

  • China’s foreign ministry said Washington’s decision – to pull the US out of what Donald Trump called the “woke” and “divisive” UN culture and education agency Unesco – was “not the behaviour expected of a responsible major country”, and expressed China’s staunch support of Unesco’s work, its spokesperson told reporters during a press briefing on Wednesday.

  • European shares climbed more than 1% on Wednesday, led by automobile stocks, after US President Trump revived hopes for a trade deal with the European Union after an agreement with Japan.

  • US-funded contraceptives worth nearly $10m (£7.39m) are being sent to France from Belgium to be incinerated, after Washington rejected offers from the United Nations and family planning organisations to buy or ship the supplies to poor nations, two sources told Reuters.

  • The US embassy in the Philippines has said the US has announced PHP3billion (£39m) in foreign assistance for the country.

  • The dollar struggled on Wednesday, while the yen was choppy after Trump announced a trade deal with Japan, bolstering optimism for more agreements ahead of an impending tariff deadline. The dollar index, which tracks the greenback against major peers, was at 97.48 after a three-day decline, hovering near its lowest level since 10 July. The gauge has lost 6.6% since Trump’s “Liberation Day” tariff announcement on 2 April.

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Key events

Revealed: Trump has supercharged the US’s immigration crackdown

Maanvi Singh, Will Craft and Andrew Witherspoon

In the six months since Donald Trump took office, the US president has supercharged the country’s immigration enforcement apparatus – pushing immigration officials to arrest a record number of people in June.

A Guardian analysis of arrest and deportation data has revealed that Trump is now overseeing a sweeping mass arrest and incarceration scheme.

The US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (Ice) agency does not publish daily arrest, detention and deportation data. But a team of lawyers and academics from the Deportation Data Project used a Freedom of Information Act lawsuit to obtain a dataset that provides the most detailed picture yet of the US immigration enforcement and detention system under Trump.

A Guardian analysis of the dataset found:

  • In June this year, average daily arrests were up 268% compared with June 2024.

  • Ice is increasingly targeting any and all unauthorized immigrants, including people who have no criminal records.

  • Despite Trump’s claims that his administration is seeking out the “worst of the worst”, the majority of people being arrested by Ice now have no criminal convictions.

  • Detention facilities have been increasingly overcrowded, and the US system is over capacity by more than 13,500 people.

  • The number of deportations, however, has fluctuated as the administration pursues new strategies and policies to swiftly expel people from the US.

  • The US government has deported more than 8,100 people to countries that are not their home country.



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