Rumeysa Öztürk, PhD student from Turkey, among scores of people detained in the US · Global Voices

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  • #Tufts_University student #Rumeysa_Ozturk held by ICE in Louisiana, protesters demand release

    Hundreds of people gathered at Powder House Park on Wednesday, to demand the release of Rumeysa Ozturk, a Turkish PHD student at Tufts University, who was arrested by federal agents Tuesday night.

    The 30-year-old graduate student and Fulbright Scholar was detained Tuesday by federal agents in Somerville. A representative of the Department of Homeland Security said the student “engaged in activities in support of Hamas.” She’s now being held at an ICE Detention Center in Central Louisiana.

    “The university campus should absolutely be a place for the free and open exchange of ideas and the fact that someone can just be disappeared into the abyss for voicing an idea is absolutely horrifying,” said rally attendee Sam Wachman.

    Detained on #Somerville sidewalk

    A neighbor’s surveillance video showed the moments Ozturk was cornered by about six plain clothes ICE agents on her Somerville sidewalk, then handcuffed and taken away.

    City leaders in neighboring Medford, where the university is located, joined the rally after seeing the video.

    “This is the exactly the wrong thing for America. This is the wrong thing for Medford. I know it’s not what our community stands for and I think we need to really see robust action from the state government here in Massachusetts to say that we’re not going to let this happen here,” said Medford City Council president Zac Bears.

    Officials with the Department of Homeland Security say DHS and ICE investigations found Ozturk engaged in activities supporting Hamas. “A visa is a privilege not a right. Glorifying and supporting terrorists who kill Americans is grounds for visa issuance to be terminated. This is commonsense security,” said a DHS spokesperson.
    Ozturk wrote op-ed in Tufts Daily

    It comes as the Trump administration is cracking down on college students who’ve voiced support for the pro-Palestinian movement. Rally organizers say last year Ozturk helped write an op-ed in the Tufts Daily calling for the university to acknowledge genocide in Palestine and separate from companies with ties to Israel.

    “This should be a safe haven for international students,” said Wachman. “Boston is a hub of international thought and it’s known for its universities and if the Trump administration is going to essentially kneecap Boston by making international students feel unsafe here, I mean that’s something we can’t just sit back and watch.”

    “What they’re saying, and reality have no bearing, they’ll just say anything as long as they get the result which they want which is to create an environment of fear,” said rally attendee David Fleig. “There’s no respect for the law there’s no respect for diversity, there’s no respect for our Bill of Rights- where is it going to end?”

    Ozturk’s attorney says no charges have been filed against her.

    The attorney also filed a writ of habeas corpus petition to get Ozturk released, and the judge has given immigration officials until Friday to respond.

    https://www.cbsnews.com/boston/news/tufts-university-student-rumeysa-ozturk-detained-protest

    #doctorante #étudiante #USA #répression #Etats-Unis #trumpisme #arrestation #déportation #renvoi #expulsion #étudiants_étrangers #ESR #université #facs #censure

    • Ordre a été donné de ne garder que des crétins haineux qui ne savent pas lire, seulement alimentés par sonde en foxnews burger et soda.
      De très bons électeurs pour les fascistes.

    • The US government is effectively kidnapping people for opposing genocide

      Rumeysa Ozturk, a visa holder, was snatched off the streets by Ice agents and sent to a detention center 1,000 miles away for opposing war crimes in Gaza

      The abductors wore masks because they do not want their identities known. On Tuesday evening, Rumeysa Ozturk exited her apartment building and walked on to the street in Somerville, Massachusetts – a city outside Boston – into the fading daylight. Ozturk, a Turkish-born PhD student at Tufts University who studies children’s media and childhood development, was on her way to an iftar dinner with friends, planning to break her Ramadan fast.

      In a video taken from a surveillance camera, she wears a pink hijab and a long white puffer coat against the New England cold. The first man, not uniformed but wearing plain clothes, as all the agents are, approaches her as if asking for directions. But he quickly closes in and grabs her by the wrists she has raised defensively toward her face.

      She screams as another man appears behind her, pulling a badge out from under his shirt and snatching away her phone. Soon six people are around her in a tight circle; she has no way to escape. They handcuff her and hustle her into an unmarked van. Attorneys for Ozturk did not know where Immigration and Customs Enforcement (Ice), the US homeland security department that has become Trump’s anti-immigrant secret police, had taken the 30-year-old woman for almost 24 hours.

      In that time, a judge ordered Ice to keep Ozturk, who is on an F-1 academic visa, in Massachusetts. But eventually, her lawyers learned that their client had been moved, as many Ice hostages are, to a detention camp in southern Louisiana, more than 1,000 miles (1,600km) from where she was abducted.

      In the video, before she is forced into the van, Ozturk looks terrified, confused. She may well have thought she was being robbed by street thugs; she did not seem to understand, at first, that she was being kidnapped by the state. She tries to plead with her attackers. “Can I just call the cops?” she asks. “We are the police,” one of the men responds. Ozturk remains imprisoned; she has been charged with no crime. In the video of her arrest, a neighbor can be heard nearby, asking: “Is this a kidnapping?”

      The answer is yes. Ozturk is one of a growing number university students who have been targeted, issued arrest warrants, or summarily kidnapped off the streets by Ice agents. She joins the ranks of include Mahmoud Khalil, the Syrian-born Palestinian former graduate student and green card holder from Columbia University; Alireza Doroudi, an Iranian-born mechanical engineering doctoral student at the University of Alabama; Yunseo Chung, a 21-year-old Columbia undergraduate who was born in South Korea but has long been a green card holder after immigrating to the United States with her parents at the age of seven; and Momodou Taal, a dual British and Gambian citizen who is studying for a graduate degree at Cornell University and has gone into hiding after receiving a summons from Ice to turn himself in for deportation proceedings.

      Many of these students had some connection – however tenuous – to anti-genocide protests on campuses over the past year and a half. Taal and Khalil, in different capacities, were leaders of protests for Palestinian rights at their respective universities. Chung attended one or two demonstrations at Columbia. Ozturk co-authored an op-ed in the Tufts student newspaper that cited credible allegations that Israel was violating international human rights law in Gaza and called on the university president to take a stronger stance against the genocide. In a statement regarding her arrest, a DHS spokesperson said: “Investigations found Ozturk engaged in activities in support of Hamas.” They meant the op-ed.

      The state department claims that some of these students have had their visas or permanent resident status rescinded – in a video of the arrest of Mahmoud Khalil, taken by his pregnant wife, agents proclaim that his student visa has been revoked, but when they are informed that he has a green card, they say: “We’re revoking that too.” This unilateral revocation of green card protections, without notice or due process, is illegal. But that is not the point – the Trump administration clearly thinks of immigrants as a population with no rights that they need respect.

      Rather, the point is that Trump administration’s promise to crack down on student protests against Israel’s genocide in Gaza has the effect of articulating a new speech code for immigrants: no one who is not a United States citizen is entitled to the first amendment right to say that Israel is committing a genocide in Gaza, or that the lives of Palestinians are not disposable by virtue of their race.

      It is up to those us who do have citizenship to speak the truth that the Trump administration is willing to kidnap people for saying: genocide is wrong, Israel is committing it against Palestinians in Gaza, and Palestinians, like all people, deserve not only the food and medicine that Israel is withholding from them, and not only an end to Israel’s relentless and largely indiscriminate bombing, but they deserve freedom, dignity and self-determination. This has become an unspeakable truth in Trump’s America. Soon, there will be other things we are not allowed to say, either. We owe it to one another to speak these urgent truths plainly, loudly and often – while we still can.

      Here is another truth: that the US’s treatment of these immigrants should shame us. It was once a cliche to say that the US was a nation of immigrants, that they represented the best of our country. It is not a cliche anymore. For most of my life as an American, it has been a singular source of pride and gratitude that mine was a country that so many people wanted to come to – that people traveled from all over the world to pursue their talent, their ambition and their hopefulness here, and that this was the place that nurtured and rewarded them.

      It may sound vulgar to speak of this lost pride after Ozturk’s kidnapping – all that sentimentality did nothing, after all, to protect her, and may in the end have always been self-serving and false. But as we grapple with what America is becoming – or revealing itself to be – under Donald Trump, I think we can mourn not only the lost delusions of the past but the lost potential of the future.

      Ozturk – a student of early childhood education, and someone brave enough to take a great personal risk in standing up for what she thought was right – seems like a person the US would be lucky to have. Instead we are punishing her, terrorizing her, kidnapping her and throwing her away. She deserves better, and so do all of our immigrants – hopeful, struggling people who mistook this for a place where they could thrive. Who, in the future, will continue to think of the US as a place where immigrants can make a difference, can prosper? Who will share their gifts with us now?

      https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2025/mar/28/rumeysa-ozturk-tufts-trump-immigration-gaza

    • Rumeysa Öztürk, PhD student from Turkey, among scores of people detained in the US

      The student was snatched by ICE officers while on her way to break her Ramadan fast.

      On March 25, Rümeysa Öztürk, a 30-year-old Turkish national and Ph.D. student at Tufts University in Massachusetts, was arrested by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents near her residence in Somerville. The arrest occurred as Öztürk was en route to meet friends and break her Ramadan fast.

      Öztürk was detained without prior notice to Tufts University officials. Despite a federal judge’s order requiring 48 hours’ notice before moving Öztürk out of Massachusetts, the student was nevertheless transferred to the Central Louisiana ICE Processing Center. According to CNN, “On Friday, [March 28] a judge in Boston ordered Öztürk not to be deported until she can determine whether the Boston court has jurisdiction to decide if Öztürk was lawfully detained — a decision that drew praise from Öztürk’s lawyers.”

      Öncü Keçeli, a spokesperson for Turkey’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs, confirmed efforts by the Turkish government to secure the student’s release, including consular and legal support. According to reporting by CNN International, “Öztürk is one of several international university students facing deportation following a Trump administration order to crack down on pro-Palestinian demonstrations on college campuses.”

      Öztürk’s arrest was reportedly linked to an op-ed she co-wrote last year in Tufts’ student newspaper. The authors called on the “university to acknowledge the Palestinian genocide, apologize for University President Sunil Kumar’s statements, disclose [the university’s] investments and divest from companies with direct or indirect ties to Israel.”

      Responding to Öztürk’s arrest, Secretary of State Marco Rubio suggested she was engaged in disruptive behavior. “If you apply for a visa to enter the United States and be a student, and you tell us that the reason why you’re coming to the United States is not just because you want to write op-eds, but because you want to participate in movements that are involved in doing things like vandalizing universities, harassing students, taking over buildings, creating a ruckus, we’re not going to give you a visa,” Rubio reportedly said. The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) spokesperson Tricia McLaughlin accused Öztürk of “glorifying and supporting terrorists.” Friends have said that, other than co-writing the op-ed, Öztürk was not involved in pro-Palestinian protests.

      On March 31, the Student Press Law Center and 13 other free speech and journalism organizations released a statement condemning what happened to Öztürk, writing that the basis on which she was detained was “a blatant disregard for the principles of free speech and free press within the First Amendment.”

      Meanwhile, in Turkey, the leader of the main opposition Republican People’s Party (CHP), Özgür Özel, condemned the detention of Öztürk in the strongest possible terms. Other politicians also condemned the detention, including the leader of the DEVA party, Ali Babacan, who stated that “supporting Palestine was not a crime but a conscientious responsibility.” Turkey’s Minister of Justice Yılmaz Tunç also condemned the detention of Öztürk during a meeting, saying the action is proof that “there is no freedom of thought and human rights are not respected in so-called democratic countries.”

      On April 3, university President Sunil Kumar defended Öztürk in a court document filed on the student’s behalf. “The University has no information to support the allegations that she was engaged in activities at Tufts that warrant her arrest and detention,” wrote Kumar, according to news reports.

      https://globalvoices.org/2025/04/04/rumeysa-ozturk-phd-student-from-turkey-among-scores-of-people-detained