Trump, Florida and Ukraine
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We look at the changes President Trump is proposing to immigration policies following the attack on two National Guard members, as well as what's next in the Russia-Ukraine deal proposed by the U.S.
By Ted Hesson, Kristina Cooke and Disha Raychaudhuri WASHINGTON (Reuters) -Kateryna Golizdra has survived six months in legal limbo - so far. She thinks she can hold out another six months, waiting for Donald Trump's administration to decide the fate of a humanitarian program that allowed some 260,
Rep. Mike Turner (R-Ohio) spoke with Nancy Cordes on Face the Nation Sunday about the Afghani immigration vetting, ongoing Ukraine talks and Venezuela.
Immigration lawyers say those deported to Ukraine could be conscripted to fight in the war, contrary to international laws that prohibit deportations to places where people could face violence.
One of our country’s own was killed and another remains fighting for life after an ambush in DC. The fatal shooting triggered an abrupt shift in immigration policy under Donald Trump’s administration: asylum decisions are now frozen and visa processing for foreign nationals coming from so called "countries of concern" halted.
Surovtsev was born in the USSR city of Zhdanov – which has since been renamed Mariupol in present-day Ukraine – in 1984. After his father, a Chernobyl nuclear power plant worker, died from radiation poisoning after it exploded, Surovtsev fled the USSR at 4 years old with his mother and two siblings.
US Immigration and Customs Enforcement deported 50 people on Tuesday—45 men and 5 women—that it said were Ukrainian nationals on a flight from Louisiana to the Ukrainian Shehyni checkpoint on the border with Poland.
Advocates say Ukrainian refugees fleeing the war with Russia have recently been facing detention and even deportation by Immigration and Customs Enforcement.
The Times of Israel on MSN
Elkin visits Ukraine ahead of reopening of Israeli immigration offices; Kyiv’s deputy PM to visit Israel
The post Elkin visits Ukraine ahead of reopening of Israeli immigration offices; Kyiv’s deputy PM to visit Israel appeared first on The Times of Israel.