Donald Trump has signed an order to open a migrants arrest in the middle in Guantanamo Bay.
Before formalizing the law, Trump said that thousands of migrants who are expelled in their country of origin will be held in the complex, on the island of Cuba.
“I’m also signing an executive order to instruct the Departments of Defense and Homeland Security to begin preparing the 30,000-person migrant facility at Guantanamo Bay,” he said.
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“Most other people don’t even know it. We have 30,000 beds at Guantánamo for the worst illegal criminal to threaten other Americans.
“Some of them are so bad that we don’t even accept as true with countries to sustain them, because we don’t need them to return. “
It comes as Mr Trump’s controversial pick for health secretary – Robert F. Kennedy Jr. – faced a hearing committee where he was grilled on his views, including on vaccines and abortion.
Guantanamo Bay created in 2002 through President George W. Bush at that time to keep the detainees after September 11 and the war opposed terrorism.
Only 15 prisoners, adding Ramzi Bin to Shibh, accused of being co -conspirator of September 11, at the detention center.
At its peak, some 680 people, the maximum suspicious of terrorism and being “illegal enemy fighters”, were carried out in the US race in Cuba.
The facility criticized through human rights defense teams and legal activists for possible violations of foreign legislation and conditions.
The Cuban president, Miguel Díaz-Canel, the resolution of being “an act of brutality” in a message on his X account, and described the base as a “illegally occupied Cuba territory. “
Reacting to Mr. Trump’s announcement, former White House communications director Anthony Scaramucci, who served under Trump’s past management, said, “Also known as a concentration camp.
“Yet no dissent. No courageous political leader willing to stand up to this.”
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RFK JR faces the Senate Audience
Earlier on Wednesday, Mr. Kennedy, the president’s selection to be Secretary of Physical Conditioning, faced a grill on his perspectives on vaccines, abortion and medicalid at a Senate confirmation audience.
Appearing at the Capitol, Democratic senators raised some of the 71-year-old’s previous remarks comparing the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) to Nazi death camps, linking school shootings to antidepressants, and his claim that “no vaccine is safe and effective”.
A senator, Sheldon Whitehouse, told Mr. Kennedy “frankly, scares people” when you talk about a measles epidemic at Rhode Island, the first since 2013.
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The nominee said he did “not have a broad proposal for dismantling” Medicaid – a state and federal taxpayer-funded healthcare programme – and dismissed claims he was anti-vaccine by saying his children were vaccinated.
Mr. Kennedy, Robert F Kennedy’s son and the nephew of former president of the United States, John F Kennedy, also asked about his past about abortion and showed them as recent statements as when he ran for president as president as president as president as independent.
Now he agreed with the president that “each abortion is a tragedy. “
Federal funding pause memo rescinded
This also happens after Mr. Trump’s budget has canceled a freezing order of federal subsidies, less than two days after having caused demanding legal situations in the United States.
Monday’s order sparked uncertainty about a monetary lifeline for states, and organizations that rely on billions of dollars from Washington.
However, the White House Secretary, Karoline Leavitt, told the American Sky NBC partners that the frost itself had not been eliminated and that it is only a cancellation of the note he ordered.