
-
Rihanna, A$AP Rocky watch Denzel Washington award in Cannes
-
Actors' union sues Fortnite over AI Darth Vader
-
Trump signs bill outlawing 'revenge porn'
-
CBS News boss resigns amid tensions with Trump admin
-
Eagles sign coach Sirianni to 'multi-year' extension
-
Trump seeks 'major' probe of celebs who backed Harris
-
Prosecutors focus on pattern of violence as Sean Combs trial continues
-
S.Africa says talks with Trump aim to salvage trade
-
After Putin call, Trump says Ukraine talks to start 'immediately'
-
How Biden cancer diagnosis could have gone undetected
-
UEFA move to defuse anger over Infantino delay at FIFA Congress
-
Biden thanks supporters for 'love' after cancer diagnosis
-
Abhishek blitz knocks Lucknow out of IPL play-off race
-
Italian designer Piccioli named creative director at Balenciaga
-
US top court allows lifting of legal protections for Venezuelans
-
Six Nations 2026 to start on Thursday to avoid Winter Olympics clash
-
El Salvador arrests rights lawyer helping deported migrants
-
Biden cancer diagnosis fuels Trump team's cover-up claims
-
Bolsonaro's trial on coup charges to begin in Brazil
-
Young Cameroonians face prospect of new bid by 92-year-old leader
-
Ex-Tour champion Vingegaard against 'stressful' Montmartre inclusion
-
Cairo-set Cannes thriller takes aim at Egypt's president
-
Nigeria needs good fathers, says director who made Cannes history
-
WHO guiding body gets to grips with budget beset by US pullback
-
Trump targets Beyonce in rant about endorsing Kamala Harris
-
AI talking trees feature at Chelsea Flower Show
-
Monkeys kidnap babies of another species in weird 'fad'
-
UK man gets two-year suspended term for gold toilet theft
-
The battle by Chile torture site dwellers to remain
-
ICJ sides with E.Guinea in spat with Gabon over oil-rich islands
-
Kevin Spacey to get charity award in Cannes despite new scandal
-
Pope meets Vance ahead of Ukraine ceasefire push
-
How serious is Biden's prostate cancer diagnosis?
-
Perrier scandal bubbles up as French parliament slams cover-up
-
Gary Lineker: England's World Cup hero turned BBC's 'defining voice'
-
Failure means Man City would not 'deserve' Champions League: Guardiola
-
Joe Biden thanks supporters for 'love' after cancer diagnosis
-
Three things we learned from the Emilia Romagna Grand Prix
-
Gary Lineker to leave BBC after antisemitism row
-
Serie A title deciders to be played Friday
-
Russian ballet patriarch Yuri Grigorovich dies at 98
-
Gary Lineker to leave BBC after social media 'error'
-
New 'Frankenstein' will be no horror flick, Del Toro says
-
Indian, Romanian climbers die on Nepal's Lhotse
-
EU relief as centrist wins Romania vote but tensions remain
-
African players in Europe: Ndiaye gives Everton perfect send-off
-
UK forges new ties with EU in post-Brexit era
-
Trump to call Putin in push for Ukraine ceasefire
-
Guinness maker Diageo cuts costs, eyes US tariff hit
-
Farioli resigns as Ajax coach due to 'different visions'

US top court allows lifting of legal protections for Venezuelans
The US Supreme Court allowed the Trump administration on Monday to end legal protections that have shielded some 350,000 Venezuelans from potential deportation.
The top court granted a request by Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem to revoke temporary protected status (TPS) for the Venezuelans while an appeal proceeds in a lower court.
The United States grants TPS to foreign citizens who cannot safely return home because of war, natural disasters or other "extraordinary" conditions.
A federal judge in California put a temporary stay in March on the Trump administration's plans to end TPS for the Venezuelan nationals.
US District Judge Edward Chen said the plan to end TPS "smacks of racism" and mischaracterizes Venezuelans as criminals.
"Acting on the basis of a negative group stereotype and generalizing such stereotype to the entire group is the classic example of racism," Chen wrote.
Solicitor General John Sauer filed an emergency application with the conservative-majority Supreme Court asking it to stay the judge's order.
"So long as the order is in effect, the secretary must permit hundreds of thousands of Venezuelan nationals to remain in the country, notwithstanding her reasoned determination that doing so is 'contrary to the national interest,'" Sauer said.
Former president Joe Biden extended TPS for another 18 months just days before Donald Trump returned to the White House in January.
Trump campaigned for president promising to deport millions of undocumented migrants and a number of his executive orders around immigration have encountered pushback from judges across the country -- including the Supreme Court.
Trump lashed out at the Supreme Court last week after it blocked his bid to resume deportations of alleged members of the Venezuelan gang Tren de Aragua using an obscure wartime law, the 1798 Alien Enemies Act (AEA).
"The Supreme Court of the United States is not allowing me to do what I was elected to do," he said. "This is a bad and dangerous day for America!"
In a 7-2 decision, the Supreme Court, which includes three justices nominated by Trump, said the alleged Tren de Aragua members were not being given enough time to legally contest their removal.
Trump invoked the AEA, which was last used to round up Japanese-American citizens during World War II, on March 15 and flew two planeloads of alleged TdA members to El Salvador's notorious maximum security CECOT prison.
Since taking office, Trump has sent troops to the Mexican border, imposed tariffs on Mexico and Canada for allegedly not doing enough to stop illegal crossings, and designated gangs like TdA and MS-13 as terrorist groups.
T.Germann--VB