#R%C3%BCmeysa%C3%96zt%C3%BCrk

EshaHaberEshahaber
2025-10-02

ABD'de Rümeysa Öztürk'ün gözaltına alınmasında yeni gelişme! Skandal detay ortaya çıktı: Amerikan Washington Post gazetesinin, salı günü yapılan son duruşmadaki bilgilerden yola çıkarak derlediği haberinde, ABD yönetiminin son aylarda Filistin'e destek veren bazı kişilerle ilgili gözaltı süreçlerine ışık tutuldu.

ÖZTÜRK'ÜN GÖZALTINA ALINMASI İÇİN ÖZEL BİRİM KULLANILDIĞI ORTAYA ÇIKTI

Haberde,… eshahaber.com.tr/haber/abd-de- EshaHaber.com.tr

2025-10-01

Reagan-Appointed Judge Torches Trump Admin’s Bullshit Chilling Effects Campaign Against Pro-Palestinian Speech

fed.brid.gy/r/https://www.tech

2025-09-15

New 'Thought Policing' Bill May Let #Rubio Strip #Passports from #USCitizens Over Political Speech | Common Dreams

Stephen Prager
Sep 13, 2025

"#FreeSpeech advocates are sounding the alarm about a bill in the US House of Representatives that they fear could allow Secretary of State #MarcoRubio to strip US citizens of their passports based purely on political speech.

"The bill, introduced by Rep. #BrianMast (R-Fla.), will come up for a hearing on Wednesday. According to The Intercept:

:Mast’s new bill claims to target a narrow set of people. One section grants the secretary of state the power to revoke or refuse to issue passports for people who have been convicted—or merely charged—of material support for terrorism...

"The other section sidesteps the legal process entirely. Rather, the secretary of state would be able to deny passports to people whom they determine 'has knowingly aided, assisted, abetted, or otherwise provided material support to an organization the Secretary has designated as a foreign terrorist organization.'

"Rubio has previously boasted of stripping the visas and green cards from several immigrants based purely on their peaceful expression of #ProPalestine views, describing them as '#Hamas supporters.'

"These include Columbia protest leader #MahmoudKhalil, who was arrested by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (#ICE) after Rubio voided his green card; and #RumeysaOzturk, the Tufts student whose visa Rubio revoked after she co-wrote an op-ed calling for her school to divest from #Israel.

"Mast—a former soldier for the #IsraelDefenseForces who once stated that babies were 'not innocent Palestinian civilians' — has previously called for 'kicking terrorist sympathizers out of our country,' speaking about the Trump administration’s attempts to deport Khalil, who was never convicted or even charged with support for a terrorist group.

"Critics have argued that the bill has little reason to exist other than to allow the Secretary of State to unilaterally strip passports from people without them actually having been convicted of a crime."

Read more:
commondreams.org/news/rubio-th

#ThoughtPolice #Orwellian #USPol #CharacteristicsOfFascism #FreeMahmoud #FreeRumeysa #WaterProtectors #FreePalestine #LandDefenders #SilencingDissent #Fasicsm #Authoritarianism

William Lindsey :toad:wdlindsy@toad.social
2025-08-11

"The best we can do is:

Be clear-eyed about reality.

Analyze the problems and understand them as fully as possible.

When we see opportunities to push back against fascism, take them.

Refuse to be quiet.

Hope that the accumulated weight of millions of people making good trouble eventually causes the authoritarian attempt to tip over."

#Trump #immigrants #AndryHernandezRomero #MahmoudKhalil #RumeysaOzturk
/2

William Lindsey :toad:wdlindsy@toad.social
2025-08-11

"Being loud matters. Andry. Mahmoud Khalil. Rümeysa Öztürk. The Trump administration is doing terrible things to innocent people and we should assume that for every case we hear about there are hundreds (thousands?) that are obscured from us.

But when we see these crimes taking place and we’re loud about it, good things can happen."

~ Jonathan V. Last

#Trump #immigrants #AndryHernandezRomero #MahmoudKhalil #RumeysaOzturk
/1

thebulwark.com/p/how-to-make-g

#ICE #cruelty #RümeysaÖztürk

Tufts University doctoral student Rümeysa Öztürk opens up for the first time about her shocking arrest and 45 days in a South Louisiana processing facility. She recalls the generous and compassionate women who helped her through this harrowing ordeal.

"On a Tuesday in March, I had spent most of my day working on my dissertation proposal and started to feel exhausted and hungry. It was the holy month of Ramadan, and I was fasting. Once finished, I quickly got ready to attend an iftar dinner, throwing on my hoodie, sweatpants, and a jersey headscarf—definitely not a day for being fancy. I was looking forward to taking a short walk and catching up with friends at the interfaith center, when I was suddenly surrounded and grabbed by a swarm of masked individuals, who handcuffed me and shoved me into an unmarked car.

Suddenly, I was thrust into a nightmare. Thousands of questions crept up in the hours that passed. It felt like an eternity as my shackled body was jostled from one location to another. Who were these people? Had I been a good enough person if today was my final day? I was relieved to have finished filing my taxes, but I couldn’t shake the thought of a book I needed to return to the library. I regretted not calling my grandparents and friends that day. My mom had heard my scream on the phone when they were taking me. She didn’t know where I was, and I could only imagine how many times she tried to reach me from oceans away, or who my father had attempted to contact. As my body shook with fear, I found myself drowning in thoughts. I began my final prayers, communicating with God that I had tried my best every day.

I was shuttled from Somerville to another city in Massachusetts, then to New Hampshire and Vermont, followed by Georgia and Louisiana. I experienced countless changes in agents, cars, planes, and handcuffs. In Vermont, I was required to take a DNA test for the first time. I hadn’t yet been permitted to contact my parents, friends, or lawyer. I asked numerous questions, but I received few answers; those I did get were inconsistent with each other.

Throughout, I was disoriented, hungry, and nauseous. In Georgia, after suffering a severe asthma attack without my primary inhaler and having a hard cry, I was feeling completely hopeless. In Louisiana, I found myself in a cramped, cagelike bus, waiting for hours. I watched as countless people arrived from a nearby plane, all shackled—hands, feet, and waists. Some were taken inside a building, while others were loaded onto a bus, where I was left behind. I asked for water but was given none. I sat with others in uncomfortable seats, all of us feeling the weight of our situations, and me intensely feeling the strain on my body, which was about to collapse.

(. . .)

It wasn’t until late afternoon on March 26 that we arrived at a 'detention center,' roughly 24 hours since I had been grabbed off the street. While waiting to be processed alongside dozens of other women in a stark white cell, I felt utterly exhausted, lying on the hard floor from time to time. As someone who learned English later in life, the lines between prison and detention centers blurred in my mind. I had a lot of questions: Who are the people staying here? How many are there? What are the living conditions like? What kinds of offenses have brought them here? How long have they been here?

The cramped room was filled with women, some lying on the cold floor, others looking scared or simply sad, all in desperate need of food and water. The bathrooms were just curtained stalls. The room itself was frustratingly bright, with hard, uncomfortable benches that added to the tension of the situation. Later in the night, we were finally given some dinner. My request for halal or vegetarian food was rejected.

Still, despite these awful circumstances, I clung to my belief in humanity. I took a moment to collect my thoughts. I then began engaging in conversations with the women around me. Over the 14 hours I spent in processing, I connected with many of them. Through a sometimes-challenging language barrier, we talked—about how we’d gotten there, where we’d been, and what was waiting for us on the inside. I discovered that another woman there also had asthma, as she carried her inhaler. I learned that several women were separated from their children.

I soon learned the color coding used in the detention center. Orange indicated 'low crime,' meaning those individuals were asylum seekers, their 'crime' being the act of legally seeking asylum or crossing the border without authorization. Women kept asking me, 'Did you cross the border?' I answered: 'I hadn’t.' 'I had a ticket.' 'I had F-1 visa one day before.' 'I am a doctoral student.’' The red uniforms denoted more serious offenses. I came to understand that this facility serves as an immigration detention center where asylum seekers, refugees, and immigrants—people escaping conflict, war, oppression, and violence—are taken and find themselves stuck for months or years. I was given orange. I wondered which border I had crossed without my knowledge.

Around 6 a.m. on Thursday, March 27, having gone two nights without sleep and little food, I was finally processed in the for-profit ICE prison. My request for a space for my morning prayer was rejected by an intake officer. Instead, I was directed to the medical center for my first evaluation, which primarily consisted of me listing my health issues to the nurse and trying to remember the names of the medications I was taking. I spent hours waiting there under extremely loud TV sounds. Later, when I was directed to where I was to stay in the afternoon, I was bewildered to find 23 other women crowded into a small cell. They greeted me with warmth and smiles, which only added to my confusion. The questions I initially had about who they were and why they were there continued to fade. I opened the plastic bag of 'essentials' that the officers had given us, which contained two to three changes of clothes, flip-flops, a small bottle of shampoo, a comb, one thin blanket and sheet, toothpaste, a cheap toothbrush, and a handbook.

Always the student, I wanted to dive into the handbook, but it was written in Spanish. I asked a few of the other women if they had an English version; they did, and they were eager to help me understand everything. I read the handbook and instructions multiple times, but some parts were confusing.They walked me through the setup of the phone, which felt outdated and challenging to operate. They showed me how to use the old tablets in the room, explained how to set up my account, and guided me through the commissary process—the weekly food ordering system that often failed to deliver—along with a few other limited features. After that, utterly miserable and drained, I turned my attention to the blue metal bunk bed."

vanityfair.com/news/story/rume

2025-07-17

Hey : our neighbor wrote a thing everyone should read.

Vanity Fair version (should you be a subscriber): vanityfair.com/news/story/rume

Alternative look: archive.ph/3fwgg

Coelophysis BauriCoelophysisBauri
2025-06-11

The recent deployment of the and the by is really beyond the pale. the fact that Trump had the gall to do so (twice!) despite strong opposition from Gov. against doing so. is brutal, and this widespread immigrant crackdown must be stop! the recent arrests of , , , and are dehumanizing. be there and be square for the protest on Saturday 14th. nokings.org

2025-06-03

“Young, an 84-year-old jurist appointed by Ronald Reagan, said that the manner of #RumeysaOzturk’s arrest seemed unusual to him.

“‘I’m not accustomed to … law enforcement officers without identification, approaching individuals masked and you know, not having a warrant…’”

#law #immigration #StateSponsoredAbduction #Constitution #CivilRights #HumanRights #DueProcess #judiciary #SeparationOfPowers #Trump #AbuseOfPower
allrisenews.com/p/aaup-rubio-t

2025-05-15
2025-05-15

Right now Judge Sessions is hearing arguments on whether #ICE gets to impose extra conditions of release on #RümeysaÖztürk, who is already out on #bail.

(Sessions declined to attach ICE conditions at the time of release last week, but said he'd consider a written proposal later).

Yesterday, #Öztürk's attys asked Sessions to reject all of ICE's proposed additional conditions of release, calling them unjustified & unjustifiable.

#immigration #law #student #visa #Trump
documentcloud.org/documents/25

2025-05-13

Student Jailed for Writing Op-Ed Released From US Detention
consortiumnews.com/2025/05/12/
Rümeysa Öztürk returned to Boston at the weekend after being released less than 24 hours after courts ruled that Badar Khan Suri’s case must be heard in Virginia and Mahmoud Khalil’s case must remain in New Jersey. By Julia Conley…
#Politics #CivilRights #FreeSpeech #Gaza #Genocide #Israel #Legal #Palestine #TrumpAdministration #U.s. #U.s.JusticeDept. #AmericanCivilLibertiesUnion(aclu) #BadarKhanSuri #GeorgetownUniversity #HabeasCorpus #JudgeWilliamK.SessionsIii #JuliaConley #MahmoudKhalil #RumeysaOzturk #SecondU.s.CircuitCourtOfAppeals #TuftsUniversity #U.s.DepartmentOfHomelandSecurity

MusiqueNow :pride: ✡️ 🇵🇸 :anarchismhebrew:MusiqueNow@todon.eu
2025-05-12
2025-05-11

Rümeysa Öztürk, #Tufts student held by Ice, vows to continue legal action after jail release: PhD student says she is excited to get back to her studies during what has been a ‘very difficult’ time

#RümeysaÖztürk #ICE #kidnapping #law #ruleoflaw #authoritarianism
www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/may/11/rumeysa-ozturk-tufts-student-held-by-ice-vows-to-continue-legal-action-after-jail-release

Peter Link 🍉🇨🇺🇵🇸🐧Peter_Link@expressional.social
2025-05-11

#Tufts student returns to #Massachusetts after release from immigration custody

from #Reuters
By Nate Raymond
May 10, 202510:12 PM EDT

[article contains 5 nice photos :-) ]

** Summary**
* #Öztürk returns home after release from immigration detention center
* Judge in #Vermont grants bail, citing substantial claims her rights were violated
* Ozturk urges public to remember detained women in Louisiana

reuters.com/world/us/tufts-stu

#EndBlockadeOfGaza
#DefendAcademicFreedom
#ReleaseMahmoudKhalil
#repression
#NoDeportationForRümeysaÖztürk
#NoDeportationForMohsenMahdawi
#StopTheDeportations
#DefendFreeSpeech
#ProtestIsNotACrime
#DefendStudentProtesters
#NeverStopTalkingAboutPalestine
#DefendRuleOfLaw #RümeysaÖztürk
#USA #US #USPolitics #politics #Trump
#news #press @palestine

2025-05-11

Rümeysa Öztürk is BACK HOME in Massachusetts!

Live: Rümeysa Öztürk press conference at Logan, Sen Markey speaking: youtube.com/watch?v=vrHq1xKtdE

#RümeysaÖztürk #MAPol #Somerpol #SOmerpoli #USpol #SomervilleMA #boston #massachusetts #tufts #

2025-05-10

Shame on everyone involved in this egregious assault on civil liberty.

The judge noted, “There has been no evidence introduced by the government [specifically Trump Regime] other than the op-ed. That literally is the case. There is no evidence here."

JAILED FOR
MORE THAN SIX WEEKS.

POLITICAL PRISONER JAILED BY REPUBLICANS.

#USPolitics #GOPFail
#fascism #FuckTrump #RümeysaÖztürk #immigration #AbolishICE

npr.org/2025/05/09/nx-s1-53930

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