US judge questions Trump administration’s continued targeting of pro-Palestinian Tufts student

Rumeysa Ozturk, a Tufts University student from Turkiye, speaks to reporters after urging a federal judge to order the Trump administration to restore her student visa record, outside the federal court in Boston, Massachusetts, on December 4, 2025. (REUTERS)
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Updated 05 December 2025
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US judge questions Trump administration’s continued targeting of pro-Palestinian Tufts student

  • Judge questions termination of Ozturk’s student status after op-ed
  • Ozturk’s visa revoked due to pro-Palestinian activism

BOSTON: A federal judge on Thursday said she was “struggling” to understand why President Donald Trump’s administration is preventing a Tufts University PhD student who had engaged in pro-Palestinian activism from working on campus nearly seven months after the Turkish citizen was released from an immigration detention center.

Chief US District Judge Denise Casper during a hearing in Boston questioned whether US Immigration and Customs Enforcement acted arbitrarily when it terminated Rumeysa Ozturk’s status in a key database used to track foreign students after she co-wrote an opinion piece in the Tufts student newspaper criticizing her school’s response to Israel’s war in Gaza.
“What’s the rationale for allowing the agency to have the discretion to terminate the record?” Casper asked.
Ozturk’s record in the ICE-maintained Student and Exchange Visitor Information System database was terminated on March 25, the same day that she was arrested by masked, plainclothes agents on a street in the Boston suburb of Somerville, Massachusetts, near her home, after the US Department of State revoked her student visa.
The sole basis authorities provided for revoking her visa was the opinion piece, which criticized Tufts’ response to calls by students to divest from companies with ties to Israel and to “acknowledge the Palestinian genocide.”

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 for views she shared in the op-ed in violation of her free speech rights under the US Constitution’s First Amendment.

Following her release, Ozturk resumed her studies at Tufts. But the administration’s refusal to restore her SEVIS record has prevented her from teaching or working as research assistant, jeopardizing her academic and career development in the final months before her graduation, said Adriana Lafaille, an attorney for Ozturk at the American Civil Liberties Union of Massachusetts.
She urged the judge to order ICE to reinstate Ozturk’s SEVIS record. While the child development researcher’s visa remains revoked, Lafaille said that simply governed her entry into the United States and that its termination did not render her student status unlawful.
Assistant US Attorney Mark Sauter argued that ICE has the discretion to update the SEVIS database to reflect if a student’s visa is terminated and the person is facing removal proceedings as Ozturk has been.

But Lafaille said the administration had put forward shifting rationales for its actions, which stood in contrast to how it rescinded its decision to terminate SEVIS records for thousands of other foreign students in April.
“This was one of several retaliatory actions the government took against Ms. Ozturk for her protected speech,” Lafaille said.


New Zealand floods kill one, leave thousands without power

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New Zealand floods kill one, leave thousands without power

WELLINGTON: Heavy rains and strong winds have lashed New Zealand in recent days, killing one man, flooding large areas and cutting off several communities, authorities said.
The severe storm since Friday has prompted a state of emergency in North Island, where the Waikato Regional Council said “one in 100 year” rainfall had caused widespread flooding.
Police said a man died on Friday after the car he was driving was trapped in flood waters near North Island’s Otorohanga.
The storm has continued down the country, reaching the capital Wellington on Monday before moving toward Christchurch in the South Island on Tuesday.
Energy operator PowerCo. said about 10,000 households were without power in the lower North Island on Tuesday, while another electricity company, Orion, said more than 200 households were without power on Banks Peninsula outside Christchurch.
Near Wellington, Wairarapa township Lake Ferry had been cut off after the only road access to the town was washed out.
National broadcaster RNZ reported residents were forming a human chain to pass supplies across a washed out bridge.
The town of Akaroa outside Christchurch was also isolated on Tuesday due to flooding and slips on the highway leading to it, the New Zealand Transport Agency said.
National meteorological agency MetService said winds that struck Wellington on Monday were the strongest since 2013.
Wind gusts of 193 kilometers (120 miles) per hour were recorded in the city, MetService said.