Santa Barbara County News and Events

El DHS tiene un plan de casi US$ 1.000 millones para que inmigrantes se “autodeporten”. Hasta ahora hay 72.000 inscritos

Kraig Pakulski 0 16 Article rating: No rating

Por Audrey Ash y Priscilla Álvarez, CNN

El presidente Donald Trump ha ensalzado un programa de incentivos de US$ 915 millones y una aplicación como herramientas clave para lograr que los inmigrantes indocumentados abandonen voluntariamente el país, como parte de una iniciativa más amplia a la que su administración atribuye el mérito de haber conseguido que 2,2 millones de personas se “autodeportaran”.

Sin embargo, un nuevo documento compartido internamente dentro del Departamento de Seguridad Nacional (DHS, por sus siglas en inglés) y revisado por CNN muestra que el programa ha ayudado a 72.000 personas a abandonar Estados Unidos hasta este mes.

Según el documento, la mayoría de los inscritos ya se encontraban detenidos por el Servicio de Inmigración y Control de Aduanas.

Los funcionarios del Departamento de Seguridad Nacional no han publicado datos detallados sobre cuántas personas han abandonado Estados Unidos bajo el nuevo programa que, según la administración, ahorra dinero al reducir drásticamente el costo de las deportaciones. El plan, llamado Project Homecoming, ofrece subsidios de hasta US$ 2.600 y vuelos gratuitos a los inmigrantes para que regresen a sus países de origen. Muchos otros se han marchado por su cuenta sin usar la aplicación, según informó la agencia en un comunicado.

“El DHS ha dejado claro en repetidas ocasiones que quienes han utilizado la aplicación CBP Home y el Project Homecoming son solo una fracción de quienes han abandonado el país voluntariamente porque los inmigrantes indocumentados saben que el presidente Trump está haciendo cumplir nuestras leyes de inmigración”, dijo un portavoz del DHS en un comunicado, y agregó que cada autodeportación con incentivos cuesta miles de dólares menos que una deportación tradicional.

La Casa Blanca no respondió a la solicitud de comentarios para este artículo.

Algunos expertos cuestionaron la eficacia del programa, argumentando que muchos de los que optaron por marcharse probablemente lo habrían hecho de todos modos sin la intervención del Gobierno.

“Intentan atribuirse el mérito de las personas que se marchan, pero no me resulta obvio que esas personas se hubieran quedado de no ser por este incentivo financiero”, dijo David Bier, director de estudios de inmigración del Instituto Cato.

No está claro qué métrica ha utilizado el DHS para afirmar que 2,2 millones de personas se han “autodeportado” hasta enero. Es probable que esa cifra incluya a miles de personas que se han marchado voluntariamente sin participar en el Proyecto Homecoming, ya sea porque no querían notificar al Gobierno sobre sus desplazamientos o porque desconocían el programa.

Si bien los incentivos financieros son nuevos, la salida voluntaria, que permite a los no ciudadanos abandonar el país sin las sanciones asociadas a una orden de expulsión, ya existía como una opción legal bajo administraciones anteriores.

Más de 35.000 casos de inmigración en los tribunales concluyeron con “salidas voluntarias” durante el año fiscal 2025 frente a los aproximadamente 9.000 del año fiscal anterior, según datos del Centro de Acceso a Registros Transaccionales de la Universidad de Syracuse. Se desconoce cuántas de las personas involucradas en esos 35.000 casos utilizaron el Proyecto Homecoming.

“Cada año, cientos de miles de personas abandonan Estados Unidos por su cuenta, voluntariamente, por diversos motivos”, dijo Bier. “Antes de esta aplicación, eso no le costaba nada al Gobierno. No se gastaba nada en las personas que abandonaban el país”.

Cuando la Casa Blanca anunció el Proyecto Homecoming el pasado mes de mayo, Trump lo presentó como una nueva y poderosa herramienta. “A todos los inmigrantes ilegales: reserven su vuelo gratuito ahora mismo”, instó en un vide

Myth says sirens wrecked ships here. Today it’s one of the Mediterranean’s most tranquil seaside escapes

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An aerial view of Foca district

By Lisa Morrow, CNN

(CNN) — On hot summer nights, a long line forms near the waterfront of Eski Foça, a small town on Turkey’s Aegean coast.

Laughter and chatter fill the air as travelers wait for their turn to buy sakız dondurma, the local ice cream.

It’s a town shaped by thousands of years of history, conquered by dozens of civilizations, yet it still feels sheltered from the chaos of the modern world. One reason, says Oğuzhan Çakırefe, director of culture and social affairs for the Foça municipality, is that “unlike other cities in Turkey, construction hasn’t been allowed,” preserving its old fishing town vibe.

Whether in taverns, at sea or along the waterfront, “shared memories, shared sorrows and kinship,” form a bridge between the past and the future, he says.

To understand Eski Foça, it helps to look to its past. Also known as Phocaea in Greek, it was an important Ionian settlement. The Ionians, a Greek people who ruled the west coast of modern-day Turkey from the 9th to the 7th centuries BCE, formed a league of 12 cities along the Aegean coast. They developed a powerful naval fleet and established colonies as far away as Corsica before being conquered by the Persians, then Alexander the Great, the Genoese and finally the Ottomans in the 15th century.

Çakırefe says the Ottomans called the area Foçateyn, meaning “two Foças,” to distinguish between Eski (Old) Foça and Yeni (New) Foça, about 20 kilometers apart.

Ancient Greek writer Homer, in his epic poem about Odysseus, King of Ithaca, refers to a town alternately called Phaeacia, Faiakia or Scheria as the last destination in Odysseus’ epic 10-year journey.

Eski Foça, with its large natural bay, is ringed by the Foça Adalar — six uninhabited islands — and the Siren Kayalıkları, or Siren Rocks, a volcanic formation that many believe matches Homer’s description.

Orhan Boğaç, a second-generation boat captain who takes visitors on day trips to the rocks, is one of them.

“The largest island, Orak Island, is where the sirens sang,” he says.

“The sirens were a type of mermaid with the head of a woman and the body of a bird. According to legend, they sang seductively to lure passing sailors towards them, where a storm, whipped up by their wings, caused them to crash their ships into the rocks, sink and drown.”

Odysseus is said to have escaped by ordering his crew to tie him to the mast of his ship.

Today, day-trippers rely on Boğaç to steer close to the startlingly white Siren Rocks, their surfaces smoothed by wind and waves. When the wind whistles through the stone and the sea beats against the hull, some travelers swear they can still hear the sirens’ call.

Sirens or seals?

Whether Eski Foça was truly Odysseus’ final destination remains debated.

In contrast, the existence of Mediterranean seals in the waters off Eski Foça is not. The seals, known as foka in Turkish, lend their name to the town. They’re an endangered species only found on Turkish, Greek and north-western African coasts, and there is said to be a small population of them living on the Foça Islands. Humans aren’t allowed to set foot on the islands and boats don’t get too near.

Because the coastline is dotted with caves where the seals can shelter, sightings are rare, says Boğaç. Some locals even link them to legends from Celtic and Nordic folklore about creatures that shed their seal skins to become human.

Back on land, visitors

This Olympian defied Iran’s regime. Now he fears for the country’s women’s soccer team.

Kraig Pakulski 0 20 Article rating: No rating

By Aleks Klosok, Amanda Davies, CNN

(CNN) — Iranian-born judoka Saeid Mollaei believes members of Iran’s women’s soccer team could be killed or put in prison when they return home after declining to sing the country’s national anthem at the Women’s Asian Cup in Australia.

As an athlete who faced a similar decision in 2019 to those soccer players, Mollaei, an Olympic silver medalist from the Tokyo 2020 Games, is concerned for their safety.

“Ninety-nine percent, maybe 100 percent, they are not safe for sure when they go back,” Mollaei told CNN Sports in an exclusive interview.

“Maybe, they’ll be killed. Maybe, they’ll go to prison. I don’t know,” he said.

“They’re fighting the regime for one word: freedom.”

Fears over the safety of the Iranian soccer players have been front and center after they were branded “wartime traitors” by an Iranian conservative commentator after they stood silent for the anthem in their opening match of the tournament against South Korea on March 2.

Members of the Iranian community subsequently urged the Australian government to intervene and offer the women refuge over concerns they’d be persecuted at home.

Seven members of the team – six players and a member of the squad’s support team – were originally granted humanitarian visas to remain in the country.

As of Sunday, five have withdrawn their asylum bids and left Australia.

The Iranian Football Association said they will meet up with the rest of the team in Kuala Lumpur before returning to Iran in the coming days.

Delivering a message in Persian during the interview, Mollaei called the country’s soccer players “heroes.”

“Heroes die once, but cowards die every day,” he said.

“You are courageous. You stood up for your future and for what your heart truly wants.

“Soon, we will all celebrate victory together in Iran.”

Five minutes to choose freedom

Mollaei knows better than most what the players have been going through in fighting a system that he says is “thinking all the time about politics” having found himself in a similar situation.

The judoka defected in the middle of the world championships in Japan in 2019 – fleeing to Germany after a dispute with Iranian team officials.

Mollaei, who was the defending champion, said he was ordered under government instructions to withdraw from his semifinal bout to avoid a potential gold medal match against an Israeli opponent.

Iranian athletes have long been prohibited from competing in any sport against Israeli opponents because Iran refuses to acknowledge Israel’s right to exist as a state.

He was granted asylum in Germany and has since become a citizen of Mongolia and most recently represented Azerbaijan.

“All the time (I was thinking) country or family in my head … but individual, heart and mind is so important. In just five minutes, I choose for my life,” he recalled of the excruciating choice that faced him in 2019.

“You come back to Iran you cannot again continue for your goal. I go to another country for my life, my freedom.

“It’s so hard – new life, new country, refugee – you can lose your everything, family, country, friends, everything, but when one person is so, so strong, you can do it.

“I can’t alone make change to this regime, but I’m working all the time. I’m one person for freedom.”

Triumph and tragedy

Almost

Alec Baldwin vuelve a interpretar a Donald Trump, esta vez en la película española “Torrente presidente”

Kraig Pakulski 0 14 Article rating: No rating

Por Gonzalo Jiménez, CNN en Español

Alec Baldwin interpretó a Donald Trump en el programa “Saturday Night Live” desde octubre de 2016 hasta 2020, abarcando todo su primer mandato. Y ahora, en 2026, ha vuelto a parodiar al presidente de Estados Unidos en un cameo en la película española “Torrente presidente”, actualmente en las salas de cine de ese España.

El film, dirigido y protagonizado por Santiago Segura, ha sido un éxito de taquilla en España. En su primer fin de semana de estreno recaudó 6,9 millones de euros, el cuarto mejor estreno de la historia del cine español, según el medidor Comscore. La campaña de lanzamiento de “Torrente presidente” fue atípica: no se publicó tráiler ni carteles de la película, ni se hicieron exhibiciones a la prensa antes del estreno.

Solo fue hasta el lunes pasado que se difundió el primer adelanto de la película, en el que se ve a Baldwin en el cameo en el que interpreta al que parece ser el presidente Donald Trump.

No es la primera vez que Baldwin trabaja en una película de la franquicia “Torrente”, pues ya en 2014 participó en “Torrente 5: Operación Eurovegas”.

“Torrente” es una franquicia de películas creada por el actor y director Santiago Segura. Se centra en el personaje de José Luis Torrente, un exagente de Policía racista, sexista, homófobo, xenófobo y fascista, interpretado por el propio Segura. Es una franquicia muy exitosa en la taquilla, aunque su humor suele considerarse vulgar y ordinario.

El otro elemento que distingue a las películas de la saga “Torrente” son los cameos de celebridades. En el caso de “Torrente presidente”, la lista de cameos de figuras es amplio, pero destacan, además de la participación de Baldwin, la del actor Kevin Spacey y la del expresidente del Gobierno de España Mariano Rajoy.

“Torrente presidente” es la sexta película de esta franquicia, que comenzó en 1998 con la cinta “Torrente, el brazo tonto de la ley”.

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5 things to know for March 18: TSA staffing shortages, Incoming heat wave, Iran war latest, Illinois primaries, Cuba

Kraig Pakulski 0 17 Article rating: No rating

By Alexandra Banner, CNN

Scientists have long sought ways to slow the brain’s aging, often focusing on drugs and high-tech therapies. But a new study points to a surprisingly accessible solution: a unique diet low in salt and rich in leafy greens may help slow cognitive decline by more than two years.

Here’s what else you need to know to get up to speed and on with your day.

1⃣ Airport lines

Security lines are stretching for hours at some US airports as TSA staffing thins during the partial government shutdown. Wait times vary widely, but some have surpassed two hours at major hubs this week. At Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport, officials are urging travelers to arrive three hours early. For many TSA agents, this marks their first unpaid week since the shutdown began in mid-February — prompting a surge in callouts and resignations. The strain is especially evident at Houston airports, where over half of TSA employees called out on Sunday and Monday. Compounding the disruptions, bad weather is triggering thousands of flight delays and cancellations nationwide.

LIVE UPDATES: CNN is tracking TSA security wait times at 15 major airports across the US, including those in Atlanta, New York, Los Angeles, Miami, Dallas-Fort Worth and Denver. See the current wait times here.

2⃣ Heat wave

A potentially historic heat wave is set to grip much of the western US in the coming days, with some areas at risk of breaking all-time April temperature records before the month even begins. Fueled by human-caused climate change, the surge will bring summerlike heat in March from California to Texas and as far north as Montana. Extreme heat warnings and alerts are already in place for millions from San Francisco to Phoenix. Meanwhile, on the other side of the country, a powerful storm has moved out, but hundreds of thousands of customers remain without power across the Great Lakes, Northeast and mid-Atlantic — a dangerous situation as frigid air moves in behind it.

3⃣ Iran war

Iran launched fresh attacks on Israel today, vowing revenge for the deaths of two senior Iranian leaders on Tuesday. At least two people were killed in central Israel as the country said it was intercepting Iranian missiles at various places, including in Tel Aviv. In the predawn hours, CNN teams in the region witnessed flashes in the sky, including what appeared to be a cluster munition missile over Israel’s capital. Multiple locations in Tel Aviv were struck by falling debris, with bomb disposal teams and emergency crews dispatched to the scene. Video showed debris on a residential street and a vehicle on fire.

WATCH: Deadly Iranian missile strike targets Tel Aviv

4⃣ Illinois primaries

Illinois Lt. Gov. Juliana Stratton has won the Democratic primary for an open US Senate seat, putting the little-known state official on a likely path to Washington in deep-blue Illinois. If elected, she would become just the sixth Bl

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