Trump calls on the law of war to deport migrants to a large, notorious impress

It was protested three times: during the 1812 war, the First World War and the most famous – between 1942 and 1946 during World War II to contact about 120,000 Japanese and Japanese Americans.

Trump, who promised the Americans to be a collective deportation of illegal immigrants, is now using the law to target Trine de Aragoa. His administration will pay $ 6 million ($ 9.4 million) to imprison about 300 people for one year, according to Associated Press.

The White House announced on Saturday that Treen de Aragoa – known for kidnapping, extortion and contracts – was closely linked to the government of Venezuelan President Nicholas Maduro.

The presidential statement said: “The result is a hybrid criminal state that commits an invasion of predators in the United States,” the presidential statement said.

Trump claimed that Treen de Aragoa was “taking an irregular war against the lands of the United States directly in the direction of the Maduro regime or others.”

The statement gives the days of the Prosecutor Pam Bondi to the age of the ruling, which makes all members of the Trine de Aragoa “subject to immediate fear, detention and removal.”

It will apply to all members over the age of 14 years and do not naturalize American citizens or permanent legal residents. The Associated Press said that the Trump administration did not specify the immigrants, and provided any evidence that they were members of the gang or that they committed any crimes in the United States.

The Venezuelan government condemned this step, describing it as “illegal and a violation of human rights against our immigrants,” adding “its deep discontent with the threat of the kidnapping of 14 years of children.”

Civil rights groups and some Democrats have criticized this step for reviving them to feed the mass deportation.

“The intention of the Trump administration to use the power of war to enforce immigration is unprecedented as it is without law,” said Li Gilrrent of the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU).

“This may be the most extremist procedure in management, and this says a lot,” said Gilrrent, deputy director of the immigrant rights project in the American Civil Liberties Union and its main advisor.

The temporary bloc of any deportation under the law of foreign enemies will continue for a period of 14 days, while Judge James Bouasburg is the legitimacy of the matter.

Bondi said in a statement that the ruling “ignores the established authority in relation to President Trump’s authority, and endangers the public and enforcement of the law.”

The court’s order said that the White House until Monday (Tuesday AEDT) to make a proposal if it wanted to cancel the stop, and failed to be the next session on March 21.

Telegraph, London

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