Explainers

Israel-Iran conflict: List of key events, June 22, 2025

时间:2010-12-5 17:23:32  作者:Crypto   来源:Cricket  查看:  评论:0
内容摘要:He was vaguer when asked how he sees the state of the economy saying, “I can’t talk about it now, I really can’t.”

He was vaguer when asked how he sees the state of the economy saying, “I can’t talk about it now, I really can’t.”

McLaughlin said Khan Suri was in communication with attorneys “within hours of his arrival at the facility” and did not have to sleep on the floor. She said Immigration and Customs Enforcement “takes its commitment to promoting safe, secure, humane environments for those in our custody very seriously.”U.S. Immigration authorities have detained international college students from across the country — many of whom participated in

Israel-Iran conflict: List of key events, June 22, 2025

— since the early days of Trump’s second administration.The administration has said it revoked Khan Suri’s visa because he was “spreading Hamas propaganda and promoting antisemitism on social media,” while also citing his connections to “a senior advisor to Hamas,” which court records indicate is hisSaleh is a Palestinian American whose father worked with the Hamas-backed Gazan government in the early 2000s, but before Hamas attacked Israel on Oct. 7, 2023, Khan Suri’s attorneys have said.

Israel-Iran conflict: List of key events, June 22, 2025

Khan Suri’s attorneys said he barely knew his father-in-law, Ahmed Yousef. His lawyers said he wouldn’t comment on Yousef during Thursday’s interview, which mostly covered his arrest and time in custody.Khan Suri said he was arrested just after he taught his weekly class on minority rights and the majority. Masked police in plain clothes pulled up in an unmarked car outside his suburban Washington home.

Israel-Iran conflict: List of key events, June 22, 2025

They showed no documents, he said. Other than saying his visa was being revoked, they refused to explain the reason for his arrest, which he described it as a “kidnapping.”

“This is not some authoritarian regime,” Khan Suri said. “I was not in Russia or North Korea. I was in the best place in the world. So, I was shocked.”PARIS (AP) — British tennis player Harriet Dart has apologized after asking the chair umpire to tell her opponent to put on deodorant because she “smells really bad.”

Dart lost 6-0, 6-3 to French player Lois Boisson in the first round of the clay-court Rouen Open on Tuesday, and was picked up by a microphone during a changeover telling the umpire: “Can you tell her (Boisson) to wear deodorant? ... Because she smells really bad.”After the footage spread on social media, Dart posted an apology on Instagram and said “it was a heat-of-the-moment comment that I truly regret.”

“That’s not how I want to carry myself, and I take full responsibility,” she wrote. “I have a lot of respect for Lois and how she competed today. I’ll learn from this and move forward.”Boisson, who made her first WTA Tour appearance of the season and is working her way back up from 303rd in the rankings after injuries, gave a light-hearted response. She posted a photo on Instagram of her on court with a Dove deodorant edited into the frame above her hand, tagging the company and writing that they “apparently need a collab.”

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