Monday Briefing: U.S. Deports Hundreds in Face of a Court Order

monday-briefing:-us.-deports-hundreds-in-face-of-a-court-order

Briefing|Monday Briefing: U.S. Deports Hundreds in Face of a Court Order

https://www.nytimes.com/2025/03/16/briefing/us-deportations-ukraine-retreat-kenya-saudi-arabia.html

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El Salvador’s president, Nayib Bukele, wearing sunglasses, and Secretary of State Marco Rubio walking together.
President Nayib Bukele, left, of El Salvador hosted Secretary of State Marco Rubio last month.Credit…Pool photo by Mark Schiefelbein

Secretary of State Marco Rubio announced yesterday that hundreds of Venezuelans accused of being gang members were sent from the U.S. to El Salvador, a day after a federal judge ordered the Trump administration to cease such deportations.

The timing of the flights could determine if the Trump administration ignored an explicit court order. The judge issued his order shortly before 7 p.m. on Saturday in Washington, but video posted from El Salvador shows deportees disembarking at night. El Salvador is two time zones behind Washington. President Nayib Bukele of El Salvador posted a screenshot yesterday on social media about the judge’s order, with a message: “Oopsie… Too late.”

Context: President Trump’s administration hopes that the agreement — which involves paying El Salvador to take suspected gang members — will be the beginning of a larger effort. The administration wants to use the Alien Enemies Act of 1798 to arrest and deport Venezuelan gang members without the due process afforded to immigrants for decades. That law is best known for its role in the internment of Japanese Americans during World War II.

Reactions: The Venezuelan government said in a statement yesterday that the attempt to apply the act “constitutes a crime against humanity.”

Related coverage:

  • Trump’s tactics are shredding decades of precedents when it comes to the U.S.-Mexico border.

  • An international graduate student at Cornell University filed a lawsuit to block enforcement of two executive orders that, he fears, could result in his deportation for pro-Palestinian activism.

  • A Lebanese doctor and professor at Brown University’s medical school was deported, despite having a valid visa and a court order blocking her expulsion, according to her lawyer and court papers.


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Ukrainian military vehicles in the Sumy region near the border with Russia’s Kursk region in January.Credit…Finbarr O’Reilly for The New York Times

Ukrainian troops have over the past week withdrawn from all but a sliver of land in Russia’s Kursk region, according to military analysts and soldiers. Kyiv’s monthslong campaign to seize and occupy Russian territory appears to be ending in the face of relentless airstrikes and drone assaults.

The fighting in Kursk is now less about holding Russian territory, Ukrainian soldiers said, and more about controlling the best defensive positions to prevent the Russians from pushing into the Sumy region of Ukraine and opening a new front in the war. Here’s how Kyiv’s offensive unraveled.

What’s next: Steve Witkoff, the U.S. special envoy to the Middle East, said yesterday that he expected President Trump to speak about a cease-fire this week with President Vladimir Putin of Russia.

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Winfridah Kwamboka never even made it back home.Credit…Kiana Hayeri for The New York Times

Promised lucrative incomes as housekeepers or nannies in Saudi Arabia, Kenyan women often return bearing the marks of physical and sexual abuse — if they don’t come back in a coffin. At least 274 Kenyan workers, mostly women, have died in Saudi Arabia in the past five years, a Times investigation found. An untold number of Ugandans have died, too, but their government releases no data.

Powerful people have incentives to keep the flow of workers moving, and the officials who are supposed to protect them often profit from the industry. Kenya’s president said he wanted to send up to half a million workers to Saudi Arabia in the coming years.


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A police officer inspecting the nightclub in Kocani yesterday.Credit…Visar Kryeziu/Associated Press

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Credit…Stu Forster/Getty Images

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Credit…Japan Association for Winter Masters Sports

When Iichi Marumo entered his first international speedskating race seven years ago, it took him three times as long to finish, compared with most of the competition. At 88, he was also three times as old. He won silver in his age bracket.

After a life of farming, publishing poetry and volunteering in World War II for a kamikaze mission, he hopes to still be skating when he hits 100.

Lives lived: Roy L. Prosterman, a lawyer who left a lucrative corporate law practice to champion land reform in the underdeveloped world, died at 89.

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The back of the “Auvers, 1890” canvas is signed “Vincent.”Credit…Peter Fisher for The New York Times
  • The cost of true or false: The Van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam acts as an authenticator of the artist’s work, but the museum is starting to wonder if doing so is worth the trouble.

  • Have your “innie” read this: The show “Severance” is starting to create a new dialogue in the way people discuss work-life balance.

  • Dressing for the plane: What should you wear on a flight? Vanessa Friedman, The Times’s fashion director and chief fashion critic, has answers.

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Credit…Gavin Doran for The New York Times

Backstage at the New Victory Theater in New York, a mythological bird prepared to take flight for “Song of the North,” an elaborate shadow puppet staging of stories from a 10th-century Persian epic.

The show, which covers stories from “Shahnameh,” or Book of Kings, has played to packed houses on three continents. The production involves 483 puppets, 208 animated backgrounds, 16 character masks and nine performers and will travel to Canada and Saudi Arabia this year.

The idea behind the show is simple, its creator said: to bring the richness of Persian culture to audiences whose views of Iran may be dominated by negative stereotypes.

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Credit…Bobbi Lin for The New York Times

Emmett Lindner writes about breaking and trending news. He has written about international protests, climate change and social media influencers. More about Emmett Lindner

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