Tag Archives: US government

UN warns U.S. deportations of Venezuelans to El Salvador

The UN human rights office warned Tuesday that the deportation of hundreds of Venezuelan immigrants from the U.S. to El Salvador is “raising huge human rights concerns”.

“Lawyers don’t know where they are,” Liz Throssell, a spokesperson for the OHCHR, said at a news conference in Geneva. “In fact no one knows where they are for certain, and we don’t know the legal basis.”

In March, the U.S. government deported more than 200 Venezuelan immigrants alleged to have ties to the Tren de Aragua gang to El Salvador, paying the Salvadoran government to imprison them.

Since then, they have had no access to lawyers or ability to communicate with their families. Neither the U.S. nor Salvadoran governments have said how the men could eventually regain their freedom.

“Reports indicate that many of the detainees were not informed of the US Government’s intention to deport them to be held in a third country, that many did not have access to a lawyer and that they were effectively unable to challenge the lawfulness of their removal before being flown out of the US,” Throssell said.

Flights carrying immigrants were already in the air when a federal judge issued an order temporarily barring the deportations under an 18th century wartime declaration targeting Venezuelan gang members.

The immigrants were taken to the notorious CECOT facility, the centerpiece of El Salvadoran President Nayib Bukele’s push to pacify his once violence-wracked country through tough police measures and limits on basic rights.

Bukele has agreed to house about 300 immigrants for a year at a cost of $6 million in his country’s prisons.

“The UN Human Rights Office has information from family members and lawyers regarding more than 100 Venezuelans believed to be held in CECOT,” Throssell said.

International human rights organizations on Friday filed a lawsuit with the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights asking that the commission order El Salvador’s government to release the Venezuelans.

The immigrants were removed after Trump’s declaration of the Alien Enemies Act of 1798, which has been used only three times in U.S. history.

The law, invoked during the War of 1812 and World Wars I and II, requires a president to declare the United States is at war, giving him extraordinary powers to detain or remove foreigners who otherwise would have protections under immigration or criminal laws.

It was last used to justify the detention of Japanese-American civilians during World War II.

The Trump administration said that the men deported were members of the Tren de Aragua gang.

Tren de Aragua originated in an infamously lawless prison in the central state of Aragua and accompanied an exodus of millions of Venezuelans, the overwhelming majority of whom were seeking better living conditions after their nation’s economy came undone during the past decade.

Trump seized on the gang during his campaign to paint misleading pictures of communities that he contended were “taken over” by what were actually a handful of lawbreakers.

The Trump administration has not identified the immigrants deported, provided any evidence they are in fact members of Tren de Aragua or that they committed any crimes in the United States.

It also sent two top members of the Salvadoran MS-13 gang to El Salvador who had been arrested in the United States.

“Families we have spoken to have expressed a sense of complete powerlessness in the face of what has happened and their pain at seeing their relatives labelled and handled as violent criminals, even terrorists, without any court judgment as to validity of what is claimed against them,” Throssel said.

Source: Africanews

White South Africans welcomed in US not “refugees”, South African leaders and scholars say

South African leaders and scholars dispute the qualification of “refugees” for white South Africans relocating to the United States, after US authorities welcomed a first group of Afrikaners on Monday.

The group, made of 49 people according to Associated Press and 59 according to Reuters, were granted refugee status under a relocation programme announced by the Trump administration in February. 

While obtaining for refugee status in the US can be a yearslong process, the US government fast-tracked applications from white South Africans, under the justification that they were the targets of persecution and racial discrimination in their homeland. 

US President Donald Trump told reporters at the White House on Monday that Afrikaners were victims of a genocide, echoing the far-right conspiracy theory supported by his South African-born adviser Elon Musk

In February, a South African court dismissed claims of a white genocide in the country as “clearly imagined and not real.”

South African authorities have also repeatedly disputed allegations of persecution and discrimination against this white minority group.

“A refugee is someone who has to leave their country out of fear of political persecution, religious persecution or economic persecution, and they don’t fit that bill”, South Africa’s president Cyril Ramaphosa said during a conference in Abidjan on Monday.

“Those people who have fled are not being persecuted. They are not being hounded. They are not being treated badly. They are leaving ostensibly because they don’t want to embrace the changes that are taking place in our country, in accordance with our Constitution”, he added.

Afrikaners, who mainly descend from Dutch settlers, are among the “most economically privileged” in the country, South Africa’s government said in a February statement.

“Certainly, these individuals don’t fall in the category of refugee,and the reason why the South African government has to insist on this is because it ys going to then give credibility to the lie that indeed they are being persecuted, that indeed they are running away from some conflict, some white genocide and so forth”, said Dr. Oscar van Heerden, senior research fellow at the centre for African Diplomacy and Leadership at the University of Johannesburg.

Dr. van Heerden said the US had to call white South African “refugees” to justify the expenses necessary to their relocation.

“We traditionally over the last 30 years have been a receiver of refugees from all over the Southern African continent”, he said.

“And now because of this stunt that is being pulled by the Trump administration, they are trying to say to the world that we ourselves have now become a country where people are seeking refugee status.” 

In a phone conversation, South Africa’s president Cyril Ramaphosa told Donald Trump he had received false information on Afrikaners’ situation.  

Trump told reporters he planned to address the issue with South African leadership in a meeting next week. 

The group of Afrikaners arrived at Dulles International Airport outside Washington DC on a private charter plane and were greeted by Deputy Secretary of State Christopher Landau and Homeland Security Deputy Secretary Troy Edgar

The US government has made the resettlement of white South Africans a priority, despite engaging in a wider crackdown on asylum seekers from other countries. 

On the same day that Afrikaners arrived in the US, the Trump administration revoked temporary deportation protections for Afghan people, citing “an improved security situation” and a “stabilising economy” in Afghanistan, which is ruled by the Taliban

Source: Africanews

Billionaire Bill Gates to donate almost entire personal wealth by 2045

Billionaire and Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates pledged on Thursday to donate almost his entire fortune by 2045. The philantropist aims to give away around 200 billion dollars to the world’s poor via his foundation.

With a fortune today estimated at 108 billion dollars, Gates is among the richest people in the world. Although he was named richest man on earth by Forbes for several consecutive years until 2018, he is today the 13th richest person, according to the Forbes Billionaires List.

The announcement comes at a time when several governments and in particular the United States have significantly slashed funding for humanitarian aid. The cuts made to USAID, the US government agency for humanitarian aid, have endangered public health, education and social programmes in countries around the world.

In February 2025, Gates pointed out that his Foundation could not work miracles, but that “we’ll be showing that we’re doing the most we can”.

“The need of course, is far greater than what we can do. But we’ll be showing that we’re doing the most we can and give a lot of predictability to the field. By having this, we’ll be here all of those 20 years but not thereafter,” he said.

Gates announced that he would speed up his wealth donation process on the 25th anniversary of the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation.

Created with his then-wife in 2000, the foundation will close once it has spent 99% of his fortune, according to Gates.

Source: Africanews

UK Election Results, Colorado River Crisis, Florida Climate Change

Britain’s Labour Party won the UK general election by a landslide, ending 14 years of Conservative Party rule. The US government is using new tactics to address the problem of critically low water levels in the Colorado River, and Republican voters in Florida reject the idea of man-made climate change despite Florida being among the states most vulnerable to climate disasters.

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“US Govt travel ban on Malawi public officers is laughable”-Chakwera

LILONGWE-(MaraviPost)-President Lazarus Chakwera on Friday described as laughable the travel ban to the United States of America imposed on four former public officials answering corruption-related cases.

Chakwera said the US government needs to focus on its numerous challenges including gun violence, police brutality against blacks, proliferation of drug trade, segregation and work to improve its porous borders, among others.

Chakwera made the remarks during the opening of the Agricultural Investment Conference marking the inaugural Agriculture Tourism and Mining (ATM) promotion week in Lilongwe.

On Wednesday this week the US Department of State issued a travel ban on former solicitor general and principal secretary in the ministry of justice Reyneck Matemba, former Public Procurement and Disposal of Assets Authority (PPDA) chairperson John Suzi-Banda, former Malawi Police Service lawyer Mwabi Kaluba and former Inspector General of Police George Kainja.

“This week the government of America issued a statement that it has established that the four people answering corruption charges in court are the worst wrong-doers.

“I almost laughed because these are just suspects who were removed from positions to pave the way for legal proceedings. But now it is strange to see the Americans jumping the gun and passing its verdict before the court process [is completed],” he said.

Chakwera, who appeared jovial when making the address, further said Malawi’s courts are capable and independent.

The President warned Washington against meddling in local affairs.

He, however, blamed some unpatriotic Malawians for the negative vibe from the US, arguing that some citizens are always the first to speak ill of the country thereby giving outsiders a platform to scorn the country willy-nilly.

Turning to the conference, Chakwera indicated that the initiative has the potential to turnaround the country’s fortunes and encouraged both the youth and women to take an interest in commercial farming.

In his remarks, Minister of Agriculture Sam Kawale said the conference has, among others, brought together policymakers, investors and financiers to share insights and seal deals for the successful implementation of the Malawi 2063 blueprint.

“Extend the entry ban to corrupt judges, statehouse officials, Parliament”-US Govt told

LILONGWE-(MaraviPost)-The country’s two governance grouping Forum for National Development (FND) and Center for Mindset Change (CMC) has urged US government to extend the ban entry (into America) to other suspected corrupt public officers at State House, Parliament and Judiciary.

The groupings observe that the move will serve as serious warning to the current President Lazarus Chakwera’s Tonse Alliance government on fighting against corruption in the country.

The appeal comes after US Government banned former public officers entry in that country over corruption including former Solicitor General and Principal Secretary for Justice, Reyneck Matemba, former Director of the Public Procurement and Disposal of Assets Agency, John Suzi-Banda, former Malawi Police Service lawyer Mwabi Kaluba and former police Inspector General, George Kainja cannot be allowed entry into the US.

But in a press statement issued on Thursday, April 18, 2024, signed by FND and CMC National Coordinator and Executive Director Fryson Chodzi and Phillip Kamangira while commending US government for the good gesture in fight against corrupt, the same ban but must extend to the President Chakwera’s Tonse Alliance administration to corrupt officials.

“We commend the United States government for designating former Malawian public officials for significant corruption. This action sends a clear message to the Malawian government and public officials that corruption, which may be tolerated or concealed domestically, is not acceptable elsewhere.

CMC ED Kamangirah

“Currently in Malawi, a concerning trend is emerging where all three branches of government—the executive, the legislature, and the judiciary—are involved in a system where corrupt individuals protect each other, and state capture is becoming normalized”, reads FND and CMC statement in part.

The statement adds, “This trend was particularly evident when the Director General of the Anti-Corruption Bureau (ACB) faced harassment from state and police forces due to her stance against corruption. Instead of supporting her efforts, the state machinery chose to side with corrupt individuals and invoked sovereignty when questioned by international partners.

“Sovereignty should never be used as a shield for corruption or impunity. Upholding sovereignty does not mean ignoring corrupt practices or practicing selective justice. It’s crucial for any government to uphold its sovereignty while also prioritizing transparency, accountability, and the rule of law”.

The groupings observe, “Therefore, the actions taken by the US government should be supported by all Malawians who oppose corruption. While we commend the US government for its decision, it’s important to note that these individuals are not the only ones who should be designated.

“There are numerous influential public servants who must also be held accountable, some of whom may be shielded by state protection. If the four individuals were indeed designated on bribery charges, then the US government should be aware that there are others, like the current Chief of Staff for President Chakwera, who have faced similar allegations but have seen their cases swept aside through questionable processes of restoration”.

The statement appeals, “Similarly, the issue of bribery extends to the judiciary, with allegations suggesting that two judges received bribes but have not faced consequences. These judges continue to serve on the bench, raising concerns about their involvement in corruption cases. The state’s failure to address these allegations leaves uncertainty about the integrity of their judicial proceedings.

“The state has consistently disregarded warnings and advice from organizations such as Public Affairs Committee (PAC) and the Episcopal Conference of Malawi Bishops, highlighting a Forum for National Development troubling pattern indicative of systemic corruption”.

“Allegations made by a Member of Parliament against the Speaker regarding the abuse of public funds and office, as well as claims that Parliament has been compromised, cannot be dismissed lightly. In Malawi, there are troubling projects and programs that appear to exist solely to siphon public funds, demanding accountability for those responsible.

“The handling of the fertilizer scandal by the state, along with the obstruction of the Parliamentary inquiry, is deeply concerning. Additionally, there is a pressing need for a public investigation into projects like the Salima–Lilongwe Water Project,” says the statement.

The groupings explain further, “Questions arise about the prudence of such investments, especially when citizens are burdened with high interest rates for projects that seem to drain public resources without yielding tangible results. The actions taken by the US government serve as a significant morale boost for the fight against corruption, demonstrating that bilateral partners are attentive to the situation in Malawi.

“Attempts to discredit or sideline those advocating against corruption will not escape notice. It is crucial to
combat corruption through tangible measures rather than mere rhetoric, intimidation, or propaganda. The timing of this decision is critical, as public faith in Western diplomats had begun to wane due to perceptions that they were granting the Chakwera administration unchecked freedom to engage in corruption without raising concerns”.

FND and CMC observes further, “In contrast, these diplomats had previously been vocal in their criticism of the Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) government for actions that pale in comparison to what the current Malawi Congress Party (MCP) government is allegedly involved in.

“To this extent, we urge other bilateral partners such as the European Union (EU), the United Kingdom (UK), and others to emulate the decisive action taken by the US government. It is imperative that individuals implicated in corruption in Malawi, whether currently serving as public servants or otherwise, face similar designations for their actions”.

The groupings appeals, “Chakwera administration must now firmly confront corruption, listening to the warnings from the international community and prioritizing real solutions over deflecting responsibility.

“Failure to tackle these issues head-on will only lead to more challenges and consequences in the future. Fighting corruption should be the government’s foremost priority, and any efforts to undermine this fight will not be overlooked or left unpunished”.