Judge temporarily blocks deportation of arrested Palestinian Columbia student

Maryam Alwan, Mahmoud Khalil, and Layla Saliba speak members of media about the Revolt for Rafah encampment at Columbia University during the ongoing conflict between Israel and the Palestinian Islamist group Hamas in Gaza, in New York City, U.S., June 1, 2024. (REUTERS)
Short Url
Updated 11 March 2025
Follow

Judge temporarily blocks deportation of arrested Palestinian Columbia student

  • On Monday, US District Court Judge Jesse Furman put a hold on his deportation “unless and until the Court orders otherwise”

NEW YORK: A US judge on Monday ordered that Palestinian Columbia student Mahmoud Khalil not be deported for now as part of US President Donald Trump’s crackdown on some anti-Israel protesters, and set a court hearing in the case for Wednesday. Trump publicly denounced Khalil and said more arrests would follow. Khalil has been moved to a federal jail for migrants in Louisiana to await deportation proceedings, according to his lawyers and a US detainee database.
Demonstrators on the streets of New York City, the state attorney general and the American Civil Liberties Union have denounced his arrest by US Department of Homeland Security agents as an attack on free speech.
Police and hundreds of protesters briefly clashed in lower Manhattan and at least one person was detained, according to a Reuters witness. Khalil, who had held legal permanent resident status and was arrested Saturday, has been a prominent figure in Columbia’s pro-Palestinian student protest movement that set off campus demonstrations across the United States and around the world last year. Trump branded Khalil a “Radical Foreign Pro-Hamas Student” on social media. On Monday, US District Court Judge Jesse Furman put a hold on his deportation “unless and until the Court orders otherwise.” Khalil’s lawyers also urged Furman to order Khalil’s return to New York. They accused the government of seeking to deprive Khalil of access to legal counsel by sending him far from New York.
Trump said on social media that Khalil’s “is the first arrest of many to come.”
The Trump administration has not said Khalil is accused of or charged with a crime, but Trump wrote that his presence in the US was “contrary to national and foreign policy interests.”
The Education Department on Monday sent letters to 60 US universities, including Harvard, Columbia, Yale and four University of California schools, warning them of cuts in federal funding unless they addressed allegations of antisemitism on campus. Even before Khalil’s arrest, students say federal immigration agents have been spotted at student housing around Columbia’s Manhattan campus since Thursday, a day before the Trump administration announced it was canceling $400 million in federal grants and contracts awarded to the school because of what it described as antisemitic harassment on and near Columbia’s New York City campus.
The federal agents have been trying to detain at least one other international student, according to the Student Workers of Columbia labor union. Spokespeople for DHS and ICE declined to answer questions about the union’s account, which Reuters was unable to independently verify.
A spokesperson for the Department of State said visa records are confidential under US law and so the department could not comment.

’CHILLING EFFECT’
On Saturday evening, agents from the Department of Homeland Security arrested Khalil in front of his wife, a US citizen who is eight months pregnant, telling him his student visa had been revoked, according to Amy Greer, a lawyer for Khalil.
His wife showed the agents Khalil’s green card and they also threatened to arrest her if she did not leave her lobby, Greer said. They then said the green card was also revoked and handcuffed Khalil, Greer said.
Hours before his arrest, Khalil told Reuters he was concerned that the government was targeting him.
Khalil and other activists note that Jewish students are among the protest organizers, and say their criticism of Israel and its US government support is being wrongly conflated with antisemitism. Jewish faculty at Columbia held a rally and press conference in support of Khalil outside a university building on Monday, holding signs saying “Jews say no to deportations.” “There is a chill in the air. It’s a chill of fear and despair,” said Marianne Hirsch, professor of English and comparative literature at Columbia University, who grew up in Romania as a child of Holocaust survivors. While the Trump administration has cited concerns over antisemitism, the president and his allies have themselves been accused of enabling antisemitism. Following a 2017 white nationalist rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, where some demonstrators carried torches and chanted “Jews will not replace us,” Trump said there were “fine people on both sides.” Trump, who denies allegations of being antisemitic, also faced criticism in 2022 for dining with white supremacist Nick Fuentes.

 


Bangladeshi politicians hold rallies as campaigning begins for first post-Hasina election

Updated 10 sec ago
Follow

Bangladeshi politicians hold rallies as campaigning begins for first post-Hasina election

  • Feb. 12 polls will decide on proposed political reforms, bring in new leadership
  • Nearly 128m of Bangladesh’s 170m population are eligible to vote

DHAKA: Bangladeshi politicians held election rallies across the country on Friday, as campaigning began for the hugely anticipated polls in February, the first since the 2024 uprising that ousted longtime Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina.

Bangladesh will hold general elections on Feb. 12, and the two main parties contesting it, the Bangladesh Nationalist Party and Bangladesh Jamaat-e-Islami, kicked off campaigning with tens of thousands of supporters on Thursday in the northern city of Sylhet and the capital Dhaka, respectively.

Nearly 128 million of Bangladesh’s 170 million population are eligible to vote in polls that will decide on proposed political reforms and bring in new leadership after prolonged political turmoil that followed Hasina’s ouster, reshaping domestic and regional dynamics.

“We want to build a Bangladesh that is free from corruption, terrorism and extortion. Our dream is to build a Bangladesh where the grassroot-level working class people also can live with their rights, the women can move freely, (and) the youths will get enough employment opportunities,” Jamaat’s spokesperson Ahsanul Mahboob Zubair told Arab News on Friday.

“We are expecting a beautiful and safe Bangladesh following the election next month. We want a free and fair election environment where people would be able to exercise their voting rights without any fear.”

After it was crushed during Hasina’s 15 years in power, Jamaat-e-Islami is leading a 10-party alliance that includes the National Citizen Party, formed by student leaders who spearheaded the uprising.

NCP’s Nahid Islam launched their campaign urging voters to “carry forward the progress of reform.”

Tarique Rahman, BNP chairman and son of the late former Prime Minister Khaleda Zia, is widely seen as a leading contender for prime minister. He has vowed to create jobs for “millions of unemployed youth” and support women’s economic independence.

More than 1,800 candidates are contesting for around 300 seats in the Bangladeshi parliament in the upcoming polls, which the country’s interim leader Muhammad Yunus said will be a benchmark for future votes.

“It will be a festive election. It will set the standard for good elections in the future. Let’s keep our fingers crossed,” Yunus said during a meeting with US Ambassador to Bangladesh Brent Christensen, his office said on Friday.

Yunus, the 85-year-old Nobel Peace Prize laureate who has led Bangladesh’s caretaker government since August 2024, will step down after the polls.

The 2024 mass uprising that forced Hasina to resign from office and flee to India began in early July as peaceful student demonstrations, triggered by the reinstatement of a quota system for the allocation of civil service positions.

Two weeks later, they were met with a communications blackout and a violent crackdown by security forces.

A special tribunal in Dhaka found Hasina guilty of allowing lethal force to be used against the protesters, at least 1,400 people of whom died, according to estimates from the UN’s Human Rights Office.

After a months-long trial, she was sentenced to death in absentia in November for crimes against humanity.

The Yunus-led administration has banned all activities of Hasina’s Awami League, meaning the former ruling party is prohibited from joining the race.

Bangladesh last held elections in January 2024, which saw Hasina return to office for a fourth consecutive term. That vote was boycotted by the country’s main opposition parties, which accused her administration of rigging the polls.

This time around, the start of election campaigns has brought an air of festivity across Bangladesh, as people find themselves brimming with hope for the future.

“Voters couldn’t exercise their voting rights for the last 17 years,” said Iqbal Hasan Mahmud Tuku, a seasoned BNP politician who is running to represent Sirajganj district.

“Naturally, people are very excited about voting in the next election. As the times have changed, people want to see change.”

Omor Fayaz Tamim, an anthropology student in Dhaka, is hoping to see a “sustainable and citizen-friendly” development in Bangladesh after the upcoming election.

“From witnessing systematic alienation from politics to being propelled into the fight for our rights in July, a (new) hope brews within (us) to be a part of a better Bangladesh,” he told Arab News.

This year marks a first for festivities surrounding the election for many Bangladeshis, especially the youth.

“I have never seen the festivities of the Bangladeshi election before because of the dummy elections arranged before. So, it’s definitely something new to our generation … I am optimistic about voting this year,” 24-year-old Ashraful Alam Khan told Arab News.

Malaika Nur, another student in the Bangladeshi capital, is hoping to see the festive energy continue until voting day.

“I hope the next government will restore peace and security for the people,” she said.

“It will ensure democracy and integrity in all sectors. It will make plans that benefit the nation. It will not oppress people who are just demanding rights.”