Anonymous ID: ce5c20 Jan. 16, 2021, 5:07 a.m. No.12548090   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8102 >>8121 >>8164 >>8194

January 15, 2021

Statement

By Thomas Lifson

 

We received a lengthy letter from Dominion's defamation lawyers explaining why they believe that their client has been the victim of defamatory statements. Having considered the full import of the letter, we have agreed to their request that we publish the following statement:

 

American Thinker and contributors Andrea Widburg, R.D. Wedge, Brian Tomlinson, and Peggy Ryan have published pieces on www.AmericanThinker.com that falsely accuse US Dominion Inc., Dominion Voting Systems, Inc., and Dominion Voting Systems Corporation (collectively “Dominion”) of conspiring to steal the November 2020 election from Donald Trump. These pieces rely on discredited sources who have peddled debunked theories about Dominion’s supposed ties to Venezuela, fraud on Dominion’s machines that resulted in massive vote switching or weighted votes, and other claims falsely stating that there is credible evidence that Dominion acted fraudulently.

 

These statements are completely false and have no basis in fact. Industry experts and public officials alike have confirmed that Dominion conducted itself appropriately and that there is simply no evidence to support these claims.

 

It was wrong for us to publish these false statements. We apologize to Dominion for all of the harm this caused them and their employees. We also apologize to our readers for abandoning 9 journalistic principles and misrepresenting Dominion’s track record and its limited role in tabulating votes for the November 2020 election. We regret this grave error.

 

https://www.americanthinker.com/blog/2021/01/statement.html

Anonymous ID: ce5c20 Jan. 16, 2021, 5:10 a.m. No.12548120   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Ice flies African asylum seekers to Nairobi in last-minute deportation push

Immigration and Customs Enforcement has stepped up removals of Africans and could send a final flight on Tuesday

Julian Borger Washington

Sat 16 Jan 2021 05.00 EST

 

The Trump administration is continuing to deport African asylum seekers in its last few days before the inauguration of Joe Biden, who has promised a 100-day suspension of deportations, amid allegations of abuse of detainees, insufficient legal protections and inadequate precautions against Covid infection.

 

US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (Ice) confirmed a “removal flight” left Louisiana on Thursday bound for Nairobi. The charter plane believed to be carrying Somali, Ethiopian and Kenyan deportees made a refuelling stop in Sofia. Immigrant support activists believe the deportees were transferred to commercial planes in Nairobi for transfer to other countries.

 

There are mounting concerns that there could be a final deportation flight to Africa as late as Tuesday – the day before Biden takes office – as part of a systematic effort by Ice to move as many African asylum seekers as possible out of the country before the end of the zealously anti-immigrant Trump administration.

 

The last few months of 2020 saw a rise in deportations of African nationals, despite ongoing political and sectarian violence in Cameroon, the Democratic Republic of Congo and other countries to which deportees were returned.

 

US Ice officers 'used torture to make Africans sign own deportation orders'

Read more

Some of the deportees had open legal cases while others, according to their lawyers and immigrant advocacy groups, had not been given a fair hearing by immigration judges appointed by the justice department.

 

There were repeated allegations that detainees were forced, sometimes with beatings, into signing documents waiving their rights to further legal hearings. Many of the Cameroonians deported on earlier flights remain unaccounted for after their return.

 

Furthermore, Ice deportations have peaked during the coronavirus pandemic, requiring deportees to be packed together at close quarters.

 

According to the watchdog group Witness at the Border, Thursday’s deportation flight left from an airfield at Alexandria, Louisiana, which has a holding centre run by Ice. That facility currently has 22 Covid positive cases among its inmates.

 

MW Hancock, a US activist providing support and advice to asylum seekers said detainees in the Alexandria facility were unable to warn their lawyers or family that they were about to be deported because there is no system there for them to pay for outside phone calls.

 

“My concern is that they don’t have commissary accounts at Alexandria. We are not getting calls from Alexandria,” Hancock said by email. “I am told attorneys can’t contact their clients at Alexandria. No visitors allowed at Alexandria. Very strange and unacceptable to me.”

 

According to one source there were 50 Somalis, two Ethiopians and a Kenyan being held at the Alexandria Ice centre before Thursday’s flight.

 

On Thursday night, two buses were pictured alongside the plane, chartered from Omni Air International, which has supplied planes for previous Ice deportation flights. Witness at the Border reported that people in chains were seen boarding.

 

The plane flew to the Bulgarian capital overnight, and then on to Kenya, landing in Nairobi just after 8am.

 

“With each deportation to Africa, Ice and Omni take more steps to hide their flights. This time it was under the cover of night,” Tom Cartwright, who tracks flights for Witness at the Border, said. “The other steps Ie and Omni have taken to make these flights as opaque as possible is that they now do not file a public flight plan, not even in the US. They mask the flight number and plane number from public view. All to hide their shame.”

 

Omni Air International did not reply to a request for comment.

 

Lawyers and advocacy groups have said there were signs that a final deportation flight to Africa, could be in preparation for the last full day of the Trump presidency, on Tuesday. However, they said Ice was increasingly careful to disguise its moves ahead of flights to avoid legal efforts to stop them, so it remained uncertainty whether this final flight would go ahead.

 

According to statistics compiled by Witness at the Border, Ice conducted 1,008 deportation flights in 2020, to at least 31 countries in Latin America, the Caribbeanand Africa.

https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/jan/16/ice-african-deportation-flight-asylum-seekers-nairobi?