Immigrant students in Minneapolis turn to remote learning

Observers film ICE agents as they hold a perimeter after one of their vehicles got a flat tire on Penn Avenue in Minneapolis, US. (Getty)
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Updated 07 February 2026
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Immigrant students in Minneapolis turn to remote learning

  • Online learning has once again become a necessity for some in the community as people remain indoors, seeking to avoid President Donald Trump’s mass deportation campaign

MINNEAPOLIS: In a Minneapolis apartment, the curtains are drawn and a table with four computers and three children make a crude substitute for a classroom.
Esmeralda, Kevin and Carlos have stopped going to school — at least physically — in the weeks since US immigration agents surged into the Midwestern city.
“If I go out, it’s only outside in the hallway,” Kevin, 12, told AFP.
Like many immigrant children in Minneapolis, Kevin is taking his classes online — a practice schools thought they had left behind after the worst of the Covid-19 pandemic.
Online learning has once again become a necessity for some in the community as people remain indoors, seeking to avoid President Donald Trump’s mass deportation campaign.
After a raid on Esmeralda’s high school about a month ago, her mother Abril decided none of her children would leave the home. She has no idea when they will step outside again.
Like all members of the family, Abril spoke to AFP under a pseudonym.
The family came to the United States from Mexico a year and half ago to seek asylum, and they are still waiting on a legal decision.
People with such cases have been targeted by immigration officials after the Trump administration launched a review of the legal status of the approximately 5,600 refugees in Minnesota who have not yet been given green cards.
A federal judge temporarily blocked the administration late last month from detaining refugees awaiting permanent resident status in the state.
On a recent February morning, the children woke up for classes.
“And then, more classes and more classes. Then we have lunch and we stay here on the computer for a while longer, doing more work and homework,” 14-year-old Esmeralda told AFP, headphones on in the middle of a lesson about fossils.
Turning their table into a classroom and their home into a bunker is “weird,” “stressful” and “boring,” she said.

- ‘Not even free to laugh’ -

Kevin said he misses his friends and teachers.
“We can see each other, but we’re not exactly together. It’s not the same thing to be on a video call,” he said.
At school during in-person classes, “we could go outside to the park,” Carlos, the youngest, reflected.
Abril and her husband Rigoberto are increasingly worried about how her children are handling the self-imposed lockdown.
“They ask why this is happening or why, if we’re not doing anything wrong, we’re hiding, and how long it’s going to last,” said Rigoberto.
A mechanic, he has not been to his auto shop in more than a month, even though it’s only a block away.
Federal immigration agents deployed to Minneapolis in December, and heavily armed officers wearing masks have been a common presence ever since.
“When we read that they’re nearby, we turn off the TV and it’s like, ‘Kids, don’t make noise, kids, be quiet,’” Abril said.
“They’re not even free to laugh.”

- No sleep -

It has all taken a toll on Abril, who barely sleeps.
“Sometimes I stay up until dawn,” she said.
The last time she stepped outside, she said, was December 3 — more than two months ago.
The curtains, meanwhile, have covered the windows for five weeks straight.
“I don’t even go out to take out the trash,” Abril told AFP.
With both Abril, a housekeeper, and her husband out of work because they are afraid to venture outdoors, a neighbor has helped them with groceries.
“As the head of the family, it’s something very, very difficult for me not to be able to do anything for them,” said Rigoberto.
Eventually, they know they will be able to step outside, “but things won’t be the same,” Rigoberto said.
“The fear will always remain.”
What does Abril miss the most?
“Going to church,” she said. “Taking the children for ice cream, maybe.”


Trump praises new Honduras leader after talks in US

Updated 2 sec ago
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Trump praises new Honduras leader after talks in US

  • Nasry Asfura was sworn in last week after winning November elections with Donald Trump’s backing
  • US president threatened to cut aid to Honduras if his ‘friend’ was defeated
WASHINGTON: US President Donald Trump on Saturday praised Honduran counterpart Nasry Asfura, whom he endorsed on the campaign trail, following a meeting at his Mar-a-Lago resort.
Asfura, a conservative businessman and former mayor of Honduran capital Tegucigalpa, was sworn in last week after winning November elections with Trump’s backing.
Trump had threatened to cut aid to Central America’s poorest country if his “friend” was defeated.
“I had a very important meeting with my friend, and the President of Honduras, Nasry ‘Tito’ Asfura,” Trump wrote on his Truth Social platform.
“Once I gave him my strong Endorsement, he won his Election! Tito and I share many of the same America First Values. We have a close partnership on Security.”
He said the pair discussed investment and trade between the two nations.
Asfura is set to speak to media about the talks Sunday.
The Honduran presidency released a photo of the two leaders smiling and giving a thumbs up.
Asfura already met with US Secretary of State Marco Rubio on January 12, after which the two countries announced plans for a free trade deal.
His win gave Trump another ally in Latin America after conservatives campaigning heavily on crime and corruption replaced leftists in Chile, Bolivia, Peru and Argentina.
Trump has been pressuring countries in Washington’s backyard to choose between close ties with Washington or Beijing.
Asfura, who succeeded left-wing leader Xiomara Castro, has said he is considering switching diplomatic ties from China to the self-ruled island of Taiwan.
On the eve of the Honduran election, Trump in a surprise move pardoned former president Juan Orlando Hernandez, from Asfura’s party, who was serving a 45-year prison sentence in the US for drug trafficking.
Hernandez was convicted of helping to smuggle 400 tonnes of cocaine into the United States.
Trump’s decision to pardon him, even as US forces were blowing up alleged drug boats in the Caribbean and tightening the noose on Venezuela’s Nicolas Maduro, whom Washington accuses of drug trafficking, drew heavy criticism.