
-
Reserved, resilient Simon Yates casts off Giro demons to crown career
-
Liverpool keeper Kelleher set to join Brentford: reports
-
Verstappen punished after ramming into Russell
-
Disney's 'Lilo & Stitch' wins N.America box office for second week
-
Olympic champion Zheng battles into French Open last eight
-
Dembele, Doue among seven PSG players on Champions League team of the season
-
Sabalenka powers into Roland Garros quarter-finals
-
'Proud' Piastri extends championship lead with Spanish GP victory
-
US says trade row with China could ease after Trump-Xi talks
-
Piastri extends championship lead with Spanish Grand Prix victory
-
Swiatek passes Rybakina test at French Open, Alcaraz eyes quarters
-
McLaren's Piastri wins Spanish Grand Prix
-
US, China trade row could ease after Trump-Xi talks: Treasury chief
-
Camille Pissarro picture perfect for O'Brien in French Derby
-
Key climate target of airline decarbonisation 'in peril': IATA
-
Swiatek survives scare to reach French Open quarter-finals
-
European champions PSG land back in Paris ahead of victory parade
-
Ton-up Carty takes West Indies to 308 all out against England
-
Ukraine strikes Russian bombers ahead of Istanbul talks
-
Man Utd sign Brazil forward Cunha from Wolves
-
Gaza rescuers say Israeli fire kills 31 near aid site
-
Gaming fans bring electric energy to Rotterdam as TwitchCon arrives
-
Indian airline IndiGo orders 30 Airbus A350 widebody planes
-
More than 1,100 migrants crossed Channel on Saturday: UK govt data
-
New world no. 1 Kunlavut seals Singapore crown in style
-
Svitolina stuns Paolini to reach French Open quarter-finals
-
Mo'unga shrugs off broken hand to win Japanese title
-
Bangladesh ex-PM accused of 'systematic attack' in deadly protest crackdown
-
Fans set to welcome PSG Champions League heroes with victory parade
-
PSG's emphatic Champions League triumph gives Qatari owners long-awaited glory
-
Two deaths, 559 arrests mar French celebrations after PSG's Champions League win
-
Two bridges in Russia collapse in 'blasts', 7 dead
-
UK to restore 'war-fighting readiness' with new defence review
-
South Korea presidential candidates rally ahead of June 3 vote
-
Gaza rescuers say Israeli fire kills 22 near aid site as truce talks falter
-
Deaths, arrests mar French celebrations after PSG's Champions League win
-
Bangladesh opens fugitive ex-PM's trial over protest killings
-
Gaza rescuers say Israeli fire kills 10 near aid site as ceasefire push stalls
-
In changing times, young Germans gun for defence sector jobs
-
Kyiv exhibition helps relieve stress of war
-
LAFC qualify for Club World Cup with win over Club America
-
Oil under $65 a boon for consumers, but a burden on producers
-
Seven dead, dozens hurt as Russian bridges near Ukraine collapse
-
Bangladesh to open trial of fugitive ex-PM
-
Poland holds tight vote with EU role at stake
-
Mexicans elect their judges under shadow of organized crime
-
Gay Chinese couple fulfil wedding dream in 'freer' Thailand
-
Trzaskowski: pro-EU polyglot eyeing Polish presidency
-
S. Korea presidential candidates rally ahead of June 3 vote
-
Pacers beat Knicks to set up NBA Finals clash with Thunder

US top court lets Trump revoke legal status for 500,000 migrants
The US Supreme Court handed President Donald Trump a major victory Friday in his immigration crackdown, giving his administration the green light to revoke the legal status of half a million migrants from four Caribbean and Latin American countries.
The decision puts 532,000 people who came from Cuba, Haiti, Nicaragua and Venezuela to the United States under a two-year humanitarian "parole" program launched by former president Joe Biden at risk of deportation.
And it marked the second time the highest US court has sided with Trump in his aggressive push to deliver on his election pledge to deport millions of non-citizens, through a series of policy announcements that have prompted a flurry of lawsuits.
But the opinion sparked a scathing dissent from two justices in the liberal minority who said the six conservatives on the bench had "plainly botched" their ruling and undervalued the "devastating consequences" to those potentially affected.
The revoked program had allowed entry into the United States for two years for up to 30,000 migrants a month from the four countries, all of which have dismal human rights records.
But as Trump takes a hard line on immigration, his administration moved to overturn those protections, winning a ruling from the Supreme Court earlier this month that allowed officials to begin deporting some 350,000 Venezuelans.
The latest case resulted from Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem canceling an 18-month extension of the temporary protected status of the migrants, citing in particular the "authoritarian" nature of Nicolas Maduro's government in Venezuela.
The department gave them 30 days to leave the country unless they had legal protection under another program.
- 'Needless human suffering' -
"The court has plainly botched this assessment today," Justices Ketanji Brown Jackon and Sonia Sotomayor wrote in their dissent.
The justices said the migrants face being wrenched from family and returning to potential danger in their native countries -- or opting to stay and risking imminent removal.
"At a minimum, granting the stay would facilitate needless human suffering before the courts have reached a final judgment regarding the legal arguments at issue, while denying the government's application would not have anything close to that kind of practical impact," Jackson said.
None of the other justices gave reasons for their decision, and the court was not required to make the vote public.
The district court that barred the administration from revoking the migrants' status had argued that it was unlawfully applying a fast-track deportation procedure aimed at illegal immigrants to non-citizens protected by government programs.
At the Supreme Court, Justice Department lawyers said the "district court has nullified one of the administration’s most consequential immigration policy decisions" by issuing the stay.
The high court's decision means the Trump administration can go ahead with its policy change, even as the litigation on the merits plays out in lower courts.
Trump campaigned for the White House on a pledge to deport millions of undocumented migrants, evoking an "invasion" of the United States by hordes of foreign criminals.
Among other measures, he invoked an obscure wartime law to fly more than 200 alleged Venezuelan gang members to a prison in El Salvador.
But his program of mass deportations has been thwarted or restricted by numerous court rulings, including from the Supreme Court and notably on the grounds that those targeted should be able to assert their due process rights.
And the administration has been berated over its efforts to restrict immigration from poor countries with human rights concerns like Afghanistan and Haiti, while accepting white South African refugees amid baseless claims that they face "genocide."
The Trump administration systematically accuses judges who oppose his immigration decisions of plundering his presidential national security powers.
D.Sawyer--AMWN