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Fri, 05 Nov 2021
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Trump's immigration reform deal to end catch-and-release of migrants & defund cartel labor-trafficking business

Migrants Mexico-US, immigration deal Mexico

The end of catch-and-release will likely wreck the cartels’ labor-trafficking business, which depends on migrants getting U.S. jobs to repay their smuggling debts.
President Donald Trump has announced an immigration reform deal with the Mexican government which likely will allow border officials to end the catch-and-release of Central American migrants.

Ending catch-and-release is a huge win for Americans and Trump because it means border officials now have a legal alternative to the catch-and-release rules which allow migrants to legally enter the United States if they bring children and claim asylum.

Those catch-and-release rules set by Congress and the courts also allow the migrants to get work permits before their asylum court hearings, which are now backlogged for two or more years.

Instead of catch-and-release, the migrants can be returned to Mexico until their asylum claims can be heard by a judge.

Comment: See also: Trump says US has signed 'another very important part' of immigration deal with Mexico - tariffs averted for now


Arrow Up

Drama on the tarmac: US judge foils secret deportation to Israel

Abdelhaleem Ashqar
© Pablo Martinez Monsivais AP Photo
Abdelhaleem Ashqar, with his wife Asma, speaking with reporters in Washington on 16 December 2004 about his candidacy for president of the Palestinian Authority. Ashqar would later face more than a decade of imprisonment and persecution by US authorities for refusing to testify before grand juries.
On Wednesday morning, a private jet chartered by the US government landed in Tel Aviv.

On board was Abdelhaleem Ashqar, a Palestinian business professor who ran for the presidency of the Palestinian Authority in 2005.

US Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents were attempting to secretly deport him to Israel, which would then transfer him to the West Bank.

But contrary to the plan, the aircraft was met by a US embassy official who told the ICE agents on board that they could not hand Ashqar over.

Pursuant to an emergency order issued by a federal judge back in Virginia, Ashqar had to remain on the plane in US custody.

Sherlock

"We are Golunov": Unanswered questions and inconsistencies in arrest of Russian journalist exposing corruption

Ivan Golunov
© REUTERS / Tatyana Makeyeva
Ivan Golunov at a court hearing.
There are questions that need to be answered in the controversial case of investigative journalist Ivan Golunov, a Kremlin spokesman said. This includes an explanation of whether there were any violations by the police, he added.

Golunov was detained last week by police in Moscow and accused of being a drug dealer. He says officers planted drugs in his backpack and home to fabricate evidence, and that it was likely retaliation for his latest investigation into corruption among high-ranking police officials.

The Kremlin is closely monitoring the issue, which triggered public outrage in Russia, but does not consider it appropriate to comment on an ongoing investigation, Dmitry Peskov, the spokesman for Russian President Vladimir Putin, said.

"Our position is that there are a number of questions that need to be clarified."

Given that the case "is high-profile, we will certainly be closely watching all the details."

Comment: RT reports that hair and nail samples of Goluvnov tested negative for drugs whilst bodily fluid results were still pending:

As noted above, unlike the Western press, the Russian press have rallied behind Golunov and the potential threat to press freedom his case represents:
'We are Golunov': Leading Russian papers run similar frontpage supporting charged journalist
we are golunov
© RT / Elena Medvedeva
"I/We Are Ivan Golunov"
Three leading publications in Russia had almost identical frontpages on Monday: a joint statement demanding transparency and accountability for narcotics police officers, whom they suspect of framing an investigative journalist.

The three business outlets: Kommersant, RBC and Vedomosti, led their editions with the words: 'I am/We are Ivan Golunov,' referring to a Moscow-based reporter, who was accused by the police of being a drug dealer. The joint statement says the case was highly suspicious, the police likely violated the law when arresting Golunov, and that the Russian journalistic community and civil society in general expect a thorough and transparent investigation into the suspected abuse of power.

The opinion seems to be shared by a lot of media professionals in Russia. Many public figures made similar remarks in the past few days, as Golunov's case became a major scandal.

Golunov, 36, has spent years investigating alleged corruption and other crimes involving officials in Moscow. RBC and Vedomosti are among outlets that had published his exposés in the past. At the moment he is working for Meduza, a Latvia-based Russia-focused news website.


On Thursday, police detained Golunov in central Moscow. They say they found a plastic bag with mephedrone, a stimulant used as a recreational drug, in his backpack. His apartment was later searched and more mephedrone and cocaine was discovered, the police reported.

The journalist on Saturday was charged with large-scale possession of narcotics with intention to sell, which is a serious crime in Russia and carries a penalty of 10 to 20 years in prison.

He insists the drugs were planted by the police officers, who were likely acting on behalf of the targets of his latest investigation: an exposé of a shady funeral business, allegedly operating under the protection of corrupt senior police officials.

On Monday it was reported that samples taken from Golunov for forensic testing didn't contain any traces of drugs, corroborating his statement that he neither handled nor used banned substances.

Police eventually said Golunov had been under investigation as a suspected drug dealer since March, but the officers on the case didn't know he was a journalist. His regular trips to Riga, where the office of Meduza is located, were considered drug runs, they said. The police insist they can prove he had been selling narcotics in night clubs, but so far have not released the information.

The journalists also claim that he was harassed while in custody, with the police apparently denying his right to a lawyer for 15 hours and allegedly roughing him up. That triggered several days of street protests in support of Golunov in several cities. In Moscow, protesters picketed the city police HQ and the courthouse, where his drug case was heard on Saturday.
The following Tweet from In The Now summarizes the above in the following video:





Stock Down

The state of the American economy

Federal Reserve building with burning cash graphic
The story line is going out that the economic boom is weakening and the Federal Reserve has to get the printing press running again. The Fed uses the money to purchase bonds, which drives up the prices of bonds and lowers the interest rate. The theory is that the lower interest rate encourages consumer spending and business investment and that this increase in consumer and business spending results in more output and employment.

The Federal Reserve, European Central Bank, and Bank of England have been wedded to this policy for a decade, and the Japanese for longer, without stimulating business investment. Rather than borrowing at low interest rates in order to invest more, corporations borrowed in order to buy back their stock. In other words, some corporations after using all their profits to buy back their own stock went into debt in order to further reduce their market capitalization!

Chess

Leaks raise questions about 'impartiality' of probe that sent ex-Brazil president Lula to prison

protest Brazil Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva Sergio Moro
© EVARISTO SA/AFP/Getty Images
Demonstrators protest in front of the Justice Ministry in Brasilia calling for the release of former president Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva and the arrest of Justice Minister and former judge Sergio Moro.
In a written statement, Lula's legal team said the leak proved what they have argued in court: that Moro and federal prosecutors teamed up to ensure that their client would be quickly found guilty and blocked from last year's election.

Moro and the prosecutors have denied any illegal collaboration or political motives.

The Intercept said it had secured the archive of texts, audio and video outside of Brazil so "numerous journalists have access to it" and no one country can block use of the material.

The website was co-founded by Brazil-based journalist Glenn Greenwald, who won a Pulitzer Prize in 2014 for his reporting on the U.S. National Security Agency's vast spying program.

Bad Guys

What exactly did Pompeo mean when he vowed to 'push back' against Corbyn?

Mike Pompeo Jeremy Corbyn
An audio recording from a private meeting that was leaked to The Washington Post reportedly features US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo vowing to "push back" against surging British Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn, and many are concerned that what he said sounds an awful lot like a top US official promising to interfere in the UK's democratic process.

At a closed-door meeting with Jewish leaders earlier this month, one of the attendees asked Pompeo if Corbyn becomes Prime Minister, "would you be willing to work with us to take on actions if life becomes very difficult for Jews in the UK?"

Bad Guys

Billionaire Koch brothers to back Dems pushing mass immigration, free trade

Nancy Pelosi democrats
© AP Photo/Susan Walsh
The pro-mass immigration Koch brothers' network of billionaire, donor-class organizations is readying to financially back Democrats, so long as they promise to support amnesty for illegal aliens and vote to advance free trade at all costs.

In a memo to its staff, the Koch-funded Americans for Prosperity (AFP) organization announced that the economic libertarian group is set to back any elected official in Washington, DC, - including Democrats - who support their agenda of amnesty for illegal aliens and endless free trade, and oppose the GOP voter-preferred economic nationalist agenda of less immigration and tariffs to protect American jobs.

Bad Guys

Google earned $4.7 bn from news in 2018 even as media groups' income shrunk: Study

Google
News is a significant part of Google's business, according to a study to be released on Monday by the News Media Alliance (NMA) which represents more than 2,000 newspapers across the US.

Google made a whopping $4.7 billion from the work of journalists last year via search and Google News, taking a huge cut from the online ad revenue of media houses which lost a crucial source of income, resulting in many of them getting shrunk or closed, a media report said.

News is a significant part of Google's business, according to a study to be released on Monday by the News Media Alliance (NMA) which represents more than 2,000 newspapers across the US.

Comment: See also:


Arrow Up

China says its May trade surplus was $41.65 billion, significantly more than expected

China said on Monday its overall trade surplus was $41.65 billion last month, significantly more than expected as the trade impasse between Washington and Beijing drags on.

Economists polled by Reuters had expected China to post an overall trade surplus of $20.5 billion in May.

The larger trade surplus came as the country's dollar-denominated exports surprisingly increased last month, while imports came in worse than expected. China's General Administration of Customs said on Monday that exports in May inched up 1.1% year-on-year, while imports fell 8.5% during the same period.

Comment: See also:


Attention

German FM warns against 'dangerous military escalation' between US & Iran

Heiko Maas - Javad Zarif.
© AFP / Atta Kenare
Steps must be taken to avoid war between Tehran and Washington, Germany's foreign minister warned, echoing broader concern in Europe over the fallout of the new standoff in the Middle East.

Following stops in Jordan and Iraq, German FM Heiko Maas met with his counterpart in Iran on Monday to discuss ways to breathe new life into the 2015 nuclear pact, hoping to avert further escalation with Washington amid a flurry of accusations and threats.

"The situation in the region here is highly explosive and extremely serious," Maas told reporters after meeting with Iranian FM Javad Zarif. "A dangerous escalation of existing tensions can also lead to a military escalation."

Comment: US Commander considers expanding American forces in Mideast because 'Iran threat'