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Palestinian student activist can be deported from US, judge rules

Palestinian student activist Mahmoud Khalil can be deported from the US, an immigration judge has ruled.

Mr Khalil, a postgraduate student at Columbia University's school of international and public affairs, has been a prominent figure in the university's pro-Palestinian student protest movement. The 30-year-old has held a US permanent residency green card since 2024 and his wife is a US citizen.

Mr Khalil was detained at his Columbia apartment building in Manhattan on 8 March, as agents from the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) told him his student visa had been revoked. It marked the first arrest in President Donald Trump's crackdown on students who joined campus protests against the war in Gaza.

Mr Khalil, who acted as a mediator between protesters and university officials during pro-Palestinian demonstrations at New York's Columbia University last year, is not accused of breaking any laws. But the Trump administration says noncitizens who participate in demonstrations like he has should be expelled from the country for expressing views that the administration considers to be antisemitic and "pro-Hamas".

On Friday, immigration judge Jamee E Comans ruled that the government had the right to deport him, saying its belief that his presence posed "potentially serious foreign policy consequences" was enough to satisfy requirements for his deportation. He said the government had "established by clear and convincing evidence that he is removable".

Mr Khalil's lawyers have said they plan to fight the ruling via the Board of Immigration Appeals and can also pursue an asylum case on his behalf. The judge gave them until 23 April to seek a waiver.

Read more:Menendez brothers' resentencing hearing to go ahead next weekUS envoy meets Putin for talks on Ukraine war His lawyer Marc van der Hout said after the ruling: "Today, we saw our worst fears play out: Mahmoud was subject to a charade of due process, a flagrant violation of his right to a fair hearing, and a weaponisation of immigration law to suppress dissent." Mr Khalil, who was born in a Palestinian refugee camp in Syria and holds Algerian citizenship, remains in the Louisiana immigration detention centre where federal authorities transferred him after his arrest. His defence team has said it is seeking a preliminary injunction from the federal court in New Jersey, which would release him from custody and could block the Trump administration from arresting and detaining people for supporting Palestinian people in Gaza.

The Trump administration has been cracking down on pro-Palestinian protesters at universities across the country. After his arrest last month, the president said: "This is the first arrest of many to come.

We know there are more students at Columbia and other universities across the country who have engaged in pro-terrorist, anti-Semitic, anti-American activity, and the Trump administration will not tolerate it." There have also been protests over the arrest of Mr Khalil, including by a Jewish group against the war in Gaza who stormed Trump Tower in New York last month. Local police said 98 were arrested on charges including trespassing, obstruction and resisting arrest..

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