American immigration officials on Friday sent an email to the legal team of Momodou Tal, a student of Cornell University, who participated in anti -Palestinian protests, asked him to turn himself on, Taal’s lawyers said in a court filing.
A “notice” sent by American immigration and customs enforcement officers is one of the first stages in the exile process.
A doctoral candidate in Africa and a double -citizen of UK and Gambia, Taal, has participated in the Palestinian protest against the Israeli war in Gaza following an attack on the October 2023 attack.
President Donald Trump has promised to deport foreign supporters Palestinian protesters and accused them of supporting Hamas and being antisementary.
The lawyers of Taal called Vikas a free speech attack. Taal had earlier filed a lawsuit to block the exile of the protesters. He has said that he was a docks.
Protesters, including some Jewish groups, say their critics wrongly criticize Israel’s Israeli and support the support of antismitism and Hamas for Palestinian rights.
According to the email of an US government on Friday, the ICE has invited Mr. Taal and his lawyer in Syrakuse (Homeland Security Investigation Office) on a mutually agreed time at a mutually agreed time.
No time was mentioned.
There was no immediate comment of snow.
Last year, Taal was in a group of activists who disrupted a career fair in the campus that shown arms manufacturers and then the university ordered them to study remotely.
Trump’s administration has also tried to deport other foreigners in its crack on Palestinian voices. Human rights advocates have widely condemned the tricks.
Mahmud Khalil, a protector of Columbia University, was arrested this month and is legally challenging his custody.
Trump accused Khalil of supporting Hamas, without evidence. Khalil has denied links to the militant group that Washington considers a “foreign terrorist organization”.
Badar Khan Suri, an Indian study at the University of Georgetown, was detained this week. Suri’s lawyer refused to support his customer. A federal judge stopped Suri’s exile.
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