KYIV: A Russian missile strike on the eastern Ukrainian city of Balakliya killed three people and wounded 10, including three children, the region’s governor and a regional military official in Kharkiv said on Monday.
The overnight attack hit the city center, injuring children born in 2007, 2010 and 2011, Vitali Karabanov, head of Balakliya’s military administration said on the Telegram messaging app. Nine of the wounded were hospitalized, he said.
Governor Oleg Synegubov posted on Telegram that at least seven people were wounded.
“The enemy launched missile strikes on the city of Balakliya,” Synegubov said, adding that at least seven people were wounded and apartment buildings and cars damaged.
There was no immediate response from Moscow to the attack. Reuters could not independently verify Karabanov’s report.
3 killed, 10 wounded in Russian missile strike on Kharkiv region, Ukraine says
https://arab.news/y9xpc
3 killed, 10 wounded in Russian missile strike on Kharkiv region, Ukraine says
US judge orders lifting of Trump-backed limits on pro-Palestinian Tufts student
- Ozturk’s arrest on a street in the Boston suburb of Somerville, Massachusetts, was captured in a viral video that shocked many and drew criticism from civil rights groups
BOSTON: A federal judge on Monday cleared the way for a Tufts University PhD student and pro-Palestinian activist Rumeysa Ozturk to work on campus after ordering the Trump administration to restore her status in a key database used to track foreign students.
Chief US District Judge Denise Casper in Boston issued an injunction after concluding Ozturk was likely to succeed in proving US Immigration and Customs Enforcement unlawfully terminated her record in the database the same day that masked, plainclothes agents took her into custody in March.
That ICE-maintained database is called the Student and Exchange Visitor Information System and is used to track foreign students who enter on visas. The termination of a student’s record from that database prevents that person from being employed.
Ozturk in a statement said she was grateful for the ruling and that she hopes “that no one else experiences the injustices I have suffered.”
The US Department of Homeland Security, which oversees ICE, did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Ozturk’s arrest on a street in the Boston suburb of Somerville, Massachusetts, was captured in a viral video that shocked many and drew criticism from civil rights groups.
She was detained after the US Department of State revoked her student visa as the Trump administration moved to crack down on non-citizens who engaged in pro-Palestinian activism on campuses.
The sole basis authorities provided for revoking her visa was an editorial she co-authored in Tufts’ student newspaper a year earlier criticizing her school’s response to Israel’s war in Gaza.
The former Fulbright scholar was held for 45 days in a detention facility in Louisiana until a federal judge in Vermont, where she had briefly been held, ordered her immediately released after finding she raised a substantial claim that her detention constituted unlawful retaliation in violation of her free speech rights under the US Constitution’s First Amendment.
Following her release, Ozturk, a child development researcher, resumed her studies at Massachusetts-based Tufts.
But the administration’s refusal to restore her SEVIS record has prevented her from teaching or working as a research assistant, leading her lawyers to ask Casper to order its reinstatement so her academic and career development would not be further jeopardized in the final months before she graduates.
Casper, who was appointed by Democratic President Barack Obama, said the administration had provided “shifting justifications” for terminating Ozturk’s SEVIS record, at times wrongly claiming she had failed to maintain her lawful, foreign student status.
To the extent it now acknowledges she complied with rules governing foreign students like herself, “it is all the more irrational that the government has imposed negative consequences on her that are inconsistent with that status,” Casper wrote.









