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Posible actividad de ICE en Thermal preocupa a padres y personal del Distrito Escolar Unificado del Valle de Coachella

Kraig Pakulski 0 29 Article rating: No rating
Posible actividad de ICE en Thermal preocupa a padres y personal del Distrito Escolar Unificado del Valle de Coachella

Luis Medina

THERMAL, Calif. (KUNA) – Reportes de actividad del Servicio de Inmigración y Control de Aduanas de EE. UU. (ICE) el jueves en Thermal preocuparon a padres y personal cerca del Distrito Escolar Unificado del Valle de Coachella (CVUSD).

Se registró un avistamiento no confirmado de un puesto de control de ICE en la Avenida 70 y la calle Harrison, informó la Asociación de Maestros del Valle de Coachella en redes sociales el jueves.

La asociación de maestros condenó la actividad, afirmando en parte: “Las políticas de inmigración deben garantizar los derechos humanos y proteger la integridad de la unidad familiar. Todo estudiante tiene derecho a una educación pública gratuita y libre de acoso”.

Los funcionarios del distrito publicaron un comunicado en redes sociales informando a los padres sobre los procedimientos diseñados para preservar la integridad de los entornos de aprendizaje y la seguridad de los estudiantes. Mencionaron que el personal de la escuela y del distrito recibió orientación sobre procedimientos claros que protegen los derechos, la privacidad y la seguridad de los estudiantes, que no se compartirá información sobre los estudiantes y sus familias a menos que sea legalmente requerido y que el acceso a las instalaciones escolares está monitoreado.

No fue posible contactar al ICE para obtener comentarios.

Las autoridades indicaron que las familias que necesiten derivación legal o apoyo familiar deben comunicarse con el Centro Legal Todec al 951-943-1955. Los familiares de los estudiantes del CVUSD pueden comunicarse con los servicios de apoyo estudiantil al 760-848-1161.

The post Posible actividad de ICE en Thermal preocupa a padres y personal del Distrito Escolar Unificado del Valle de Coachella appeared first on News Channel 3-12.

Minneapolis se está convirtiendo en un campo de pruebas crucial para el proyecto de hombre fuerte de Trump

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Análisis por Stephen Collinson, CNN

Presagios sombríos apuntan a que algo horrible se está construyendo en Minneapolis.

Las tensiones están aumentando rápidamente en medio de violentos enfrentamientos entre manifestantes y funcionarios federales que ejecutan la purga de deportaciones del presidente Donald Trump más de una semana después de la muerte de Renee Good por disparos de un agente de ICE.

Este podría ser un enfrentamiento local. Pero se está convirtiendo en un momento político y cultural nacional, ya que los teléfonos celulares muestran constantemente imágenes cargadas de emoción.

En una escena casi inverosímil, agentes de ICE sacaron de su auto a una mujer discapacitada mientras se dirigía a una cita por traumatismo craneoencefálico.

Otros videos muestran a manifestantes coreando improperios contra agentes federales en las calles. En una nación polarizada, cada uno puede elegir el incidente que mejor se adapte a sus preferencias políticas.

Esta es una escena de represión despiadada orquestada por el presidente.

Minneapolis se ha convertido en un caldo de cultivo para sus políticas inmigratorias de línea dura, su fervor por las tácticas militarizadas de aplicación de la ley y sus intentos de usar la inmigración como arma para aplastar los valores progresistas en ciudades que rechazan su liderazgo autoritario.

Sin embargo, el presidente también podría estar llevando al país a un punto de inflexión que podría perjudicarlo políticamente.

Si bien su promesa de reforzar la frontera sur de Estados Unidos fue popular, cada vez hay más pruebas en las encuestas de opinión de que los estadounidenses se sienten alienados por las belicosas redadas del ICE en un año en que los republicanos ya temen las elecciones de mitad de mandato.

Trump corre el riesgo de socavar una de sus constantes fortalezas políticas —la política inmigratoria— al crear en la opinión pública una distinción entre la seguridad fronteriza y la aplicación insensible de la ley a cientos de kilómetros de distancia.

Durante su primer mandato, las imágenes de niños migrantes indocumentados en centros de detención similares a jaulas fueron demasiado para muchos ciudadanos.

En su segundo, la tolerancia pública hacia las deportaciones podría ser más profunda. Pero la está poniendo a prueba en Minnesota.

Las autoridades federales afirman que el aumento de 3.000 agentes federales en Minnesota es una medida prudente para abordar la inmigración descontrolada bajo la administración Biden y una forma de hacer que Estados Unidos sea más seguro.

Acusan a los líderes demócratas locales de proteger a delincuentes e incitar a la violencia que pone en peligro a los agentes del Servicio de Inmigración y Control de Aduanas (ICE).

Sin embargo, la imagen de hombres enmascarados y armados con uniformes de camuflaje saliendo de los autos, abordando a la gente en las calles y exigiendo documentos de ciudadanía evoca imágenes autoritarias que parecen claramente antiestadounidenses.

Estas no son tácticas policiales tradicionales diseñadas para evitar la escalada. Es como si la administración pretendiera lo contrario.

Si los funcionarios quisieran bajar los ánimos, podrían hacerlo. Las tácticas de ICE podrían moderarse. La aplicación de la ley podría ser más sutil y específica.

Las autorid

It’s got tigers, tea plantations and beaches — so why does Bangladesh struggle to attract tourists?

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By Richard Collett, CNN

It has vast mangrove forests, hills covered in tea plantations and record-breaking beaches, but for most tourists, Bangladesh is still a blank space on the map.

The South Asia country welcomed just 650,000 international tourists in 2024, according to the Bangladesh Tourism Board — a fraction of the numbers drawn by neighboring destinations such as India and Sri Lanka.

Despite its natural treasures and the urban fascinations of a country with more than 170 million people, Bangladesh has so far struggled to emerge as a mainstream travel destination.

“I think there’s a subconscious association of the country with natural disasters,” says Jim O’Brien, director of Native Eye Travel, a tour company operating in Bangladesh since 2017. “We only ever hear about the country for the wrong reasons.”

Local tour operators say those perceptions obscure both the diversity of the country and the experiences travelers increasingly seek.

Fahad Ahmed, founder of Bengal Expedition Tours, wants visitors to explore Dhaka, where 24 million people live and work in one of the world’s most densely populated cities.

He also points to the rolling hills of Sreemangal, where tea plantations stretch north towards the Himalayas, and to Cox’s Bazar, whose 75 miles of white sand is often described as the world’s longest natural sea beach.

“Travelers want to have local experiences; they want to see real local life in Bangladesh,” Ahmed says. “Tourism here is still developing, but there’s so much potential.”

With visas-on-arrival available for most nationalities, new hotels opening in Dhaka and more international tour operators adding Bangladesh to their itineraries, Ahmed believes the country is becoming easier to visit — if not yet easier to sell.

Negative perspectives of Bangladesh

Anand Patel, a British tourist, visited Bangladesh with adventure tour company Lupine Travel in November 2025 as part of a combined trip to Bhutan. Although it had never been high on his bucket list, he jumped at the opportunity to explore a new country.

“When I told people I was going there, one person basically said: ‘Why? People leave Bangladesh to come here!” he told CNN Travel.

“Bangladesh’s reputation in the West is one of a producer nation — especially textiles — and only makes the news when there are floods or uprisings. It’s a negative perspective. As a result, the country passes under the radar as a destination.”

After arriving in Dhaka, Patel traveled south on a six-hour bus journey to Barishal, a riverside city in the Ganges River Delta.

“Unlike others I have seen, this was not a tourist spectacle but was a very authentic local market, with small boats full of fruits and crops, farmers selling their produce and hawkers selling freshly made treats,” he recalls.

“The journey there on the boats was lovely, moving through the farms and forest by river, waving to the people on the bank. A really nice day out.”

Gary Joyce, an Irish tourist who joined a Lupine tour around the same time, had long wanted to visit Bangladesh after living in neighboring India.

“We stayed in the Old City,” he says of his arrival in Dhaka.

“So we were introduced to the street chaos from the start. My first impression was of a city that never sleeps. The sights and noises attack you from every angle. A great introduction.”

Joyce traveled across the Ganges by boat to visit Dhaka’s shipbreaking and repair yards, explored the abandoned former capital of Panam, and took local ferries through the delta.

“Every aspect of the tour was a great experience,” he says. “For me, the highlights we

Alleged Charlie Kirk assassin Tyler Robinson’s defense is set to argue to disqualify prosecutors from the case

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By Andi Babineau, Nick Watt, CNN

(CNN) — Tyler Robinson, the 22-year-old man accused of killing Charlie Kirk, is expected to appear in a Utah court Friday afternoon for what could be a consequential hearing in the case.

Robinson’s defense attorneys allege a conflict of interest exists at the Utah County Attorney’s Office and will be arguing to have the entire office disqualified from prosecuting the case – the latest development on the road to a state trial for the killing of the prominent conservative activist.

The defense team first addressed the potential conflict of interest during an October 24 hearing that was at the time sealed to the public: An attorney’s 18-year-old child was at the September 10 Utah Valley University event where Kirk was shot, according to court documents.

“A family member of one of the attorneys was present at the incident,” defense attorney Richard Novak told the court, according to a redacted transcript from the hearing. “Law enforcement were actually deployed to the area with her safety and status in mind.”

The attorney’s name has been redacted from public documents.

The daughter, a student at the university, was about 85 feet from where Kirk was seated, according to the documents.

The county attorney’s office will argue no conflict of interest exists because the attorney’s daughter, referred to as “adult child (AC)” in court documents, “did not see Charlie get shot,” and “did not see anyone [in the crowd or elsewhere] with a gun.”

The attorney’s office won’t be calling the daughter as a witness in the case because “nearly everything [AC] knows about the actual homicide is hearsay,” a document filed by the attorney’s office says. “And because Mr. [Dpty Atty] has no conflict of interest, the County Attorney’s Office also has no conflict of interest requiring disqualification.”

The defense also implies in its motion to disqualify that the attorney’s office’s decision to pursue the death penalty so quickly in the case may have been related to the alleged conflict of interest.

“The rush to seek death in this case evidences strong emotional reactions” by the prosecution, the motion says.

In Utah, prosecutors have 60 days after an arraignment to file notice of intent to pursue the death penalty against a defendant.

The attorney’s office pushed back on that assertion in their response, saying “there is nothing unusual or untoward about filing a death penalty notice before a preliminary hearing.”

The evidence and circumstances of the case “justify the death penalty,” and a delay “would have been unnecessarily unsettling and painful to Charlie Kirk’s loved ones and does not promote justice for anyone,” the court filing said.

Robinson will not be arraigned until after his preliminary hearing, which is scheduled to begin on May 18 and last three days. He has not yet entered a plea.

The brazen killing – seen by students in person and many more people in videos that spread swiftly online – took place as Kirk was speaking at the Utah university last year and was followed by an intense, 30-plus-hour manhunt for a sniper who authorities said fired the fatal shot from a nearby roof.

Robinson, who surrendered to police a day after the shooting, is facing a flurry of charges, including aggravated murder, felony use of a firearm, obstruction of justice, and witness tampering. Several of the charges also include victim targeting enhancements and the aggravating factor of having committed a violent offense in the presence of a child.

A charging document laid out the key e

Venezuela’s Machado gave Trump her Nobel prize. All she got was a swag bag and a shrug about her future.

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By Jessie Yeung, CNN

(CNN) — When Venezuela’s opposition leader María Corina Machado walked into the White House on Thursday, she came bearing the gift US President Donald Trump has long coveted: a Nobel Peace Prize.

Machado, a fierce critic of Venezuela’s former strongman Nicolás Maduro, won the award last year for her campaign for greater democracy. Now she was leaving the medal in the White House, hoping the gesture might buy her something far more valuable: US backing in the fight to lead Venezuela’s post-Maduro future.

But all she appeared to get in return for her audacious move was a Trump-branded swag bag – and little clarity.

Machado is one of two figures vying for the leadership of a post-Maduro Venezuela. Trump has placed Maduro’s ex-Vice President Delcy Rodriguez as acting president for now, even though she was a longtime regime insider.

“Maria presented me with her Nobel Peace Prize for the work I have done. Such a wonderful gesture of mutual respect,” Trump posted on Truth Social.

The Oslo-based Nobel Peace Center promptly reiterated that the medals cannot be shared or transferred.

“A medal can change owners, but the title of a Nobel Peace Prize laureate cannot,” the committee said on X.

Machado, meanwhile, gave an optimistic view of her meeting, calling it “historic” and “extraordinary.”

She added the Trump administration understood the need to rebuild institutions and protect human rights and free speech, and for a “new, genuine electoral process” to encourage Venezuelans to return to their country.

She also insisted Venezuela already has a president-elect: Edmundo González, the opposition candidate the US previously recognized after the country’s disputed 2024 election.

Government-appointed electoral authorities had named Maduro the winner, allowing him to cling to power until his abrupt capture by US special forces. But at the time, opposition leaders, as well as the US and international watchdogs, voiced concern about allegations of foul play.

But despite Washington’s earlier support for Machado and González, Trump did not rally behind the opposition after Maduro’s capture. Instead, he threw his support behind Rodriguez – a move that stunned many anti-Maduro figures.

Despite Machado’s upbeat tone, it remains unclear what, if anything, she secured beyond a photo-op and an official gift bag embossed with Trump’s signature.

The Trump administration has indicated several times that it views Rodriguez as a stable, pragmatic choice that the US can work with.

And on Thursday as their meeting kicked off, White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said Trump’s assessment of Machado had not budged.

“I know the president was looking forward to this meeting, and he was expecting it to be a good and positive discussion with Ms. Machado, who is really a remarkable and brave voice for many of the people of Venezuela,” Leavitt said.

But she added Trump stands by his previous assertion that Machado lacks the necessary support to lead Venezuela. “At this moment in time, his opinion on that matter has not changed,” she said.

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