
Justice Department makes it easier to deport those with DACA status
Justice Department's new policy makes it easier to deport DACA recipients.

The IDF launched strikes in southern Lebanon targeting Hezbollah rocket launchers. A temporary ceasefire between Israel and Lebanon has been extended for three weeks but remains loosely observed.
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The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) said it launched strikes in three areas in southern Lebanon against what it claimed were Hezbollah rocket launchers.
The strikes hit the villages of Deir al-Zahrani, Kfar Reman and al-Sama’iya, which are north of where IDF forces are located in southern Lebanon.
On Thursday, Donald Trump announced that a temporary ceasefire between Israel and Lebanon – which was due to expire tomorrow – has been extended by three weeks. But the ceasefire has only been loosely observed by Israel and Hezbollah, with few but continued attacks reported since the start of the truce on 17 April.

Smoke rises in Lebanon, as seen from the Israeli side of the border. Photograph: Florion Goga/Reuters
Islamabad is getting ready for what is hoped to be the latest round of talks between the US and Iran, with US envoys expected to travel to Pakistan. But Iran has ruled out direct negotiations with US representatives.

Police officers stand guard near the Serena Hotel, the venue for expected US-Iran talks, in Islamabad's Red Zone. Photograph: Aamir Qureshi/AFP/Getty Images

The IDF struck the villages of Deir al-Zahrani, Kfar Reman, and al-Sama’iya.
Donald Trump announced the extension of the ceasefire by three weeks.
The temporary ceasefire started on April 17.
The ceasefire has been loosely observed, with continued attacks reported since its start.

Justice Department's new policy makes it easier to deport DACA recipients.

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Iran's foreign minister arrived in Islamabad on 24 April and US envoys headed to the Pakistani capital in a bid to kickstart a new round of peace negotiations amid a fragile ceasefire. Photograph: Aamir Qureshi/AFP/Getty Images

Police officers stand guard at a checkpoint near the Faisal Mosque, for the US and Iran talks, in Islamabad. Photograph: Anjum Naveed/AP
Nearly eight weeks after Donald Trump launched his assault on Iran, the White House has shifted from a strategy of shock-and-awe bombardments and leadership decapitation to a plan of sustained economic pressure as it tests the will of a regime practiced over decades at wars of attrition.
But as the Guardian’s global affairs correspondent, Andrew Roth, writes, US allies are worried that the White House is running out of ideas. At the same time, Washington has signalled it will punish its Nato allies for failing to support it more openly – while they suffer the worst economic consequences from the closure of the vital waterway.
“We don’t see a clear strategy – and we don’t think that there is one,” said a senior European diplomat in Washington. “And we are worried we will be left with the fallout.”
You can read more of Andrew’s analysis here:
While US envoys head to Islamabad in the hope of renewing peace talks with Iran, Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza began voting Saturday in municipal elections in a first vote since the Gaza war, marked by a narrow political field and widespread disillusionment.
Nearly 1.5 million people are registered to vote in the Israeli-occupied West Bank, as well as 70,000 people in Gaza’s Deir el-Balah area, according to the Ramallah-based Central Elections Commission.

A Palestinian woman shows her marked finger after casting her ballot in a polling station during municipal elections in the Israeli-occupied West Bank city of Hebron on 25 April 2026. Photograph: Hazem Bader/AFP/Getty Images
Most electoral lists are aligned with President Mahmud Abbas’s secular-nationalist Fatah party or running as independents. There are no lists affiliated with Fatah’s archrival, Hamas, which controls nearly half of the Gaza Strip.
A US-Kuwaiti journalist who was detained in Kuwait for online posts related to the Iran war has been released and has left the Gulf nation, after being acquitted of “spreading false information”.
A US state department official said on Friday that Ahmed Shihab-Eldin, 41, had left Kuwait.

Ahmed Shihab‑Eldin in 2025 at the opening night of the Doha film festival. Photograph: John Phillips/Getty Images for Doha Film Festival
Last week, the New York-based Committee to Protect Journalists said Shihab-Eldin had not been seen in public since 2 March, after being detained by Kuwaiti authorities during a crackdown by Gulf nations on people filming or posting footage from the conflict that started when the US and Israel attacked Iran at the end of February.
Shihab-Eldin had been visiting family in Kuwait and was arrested on 3 March, according to CPJ. The media watchdog said he was charged with spreading false information, harming national security and misusing his mobile phone.
A Kuwaiti court acquitted him on all charges, CPJ said on Thursday, citing a statement from lawyers for Shihab-Eldin’s sisters.
The US said on Friday it had imposed sanctions on an independent “teapot” refinery in China for buying billions of dollars’ worth of Iranian oil, as Washington and Tehran head into another round of peace talks this weekend.
The Treasury Department targeted Hengli Petrochemical (Dalian) Refinery, which it said is one of Iran’s largest customers of crude oil and petroleum products. The department’s Office of Foreign Assets Control said it also imposed sanctions on about 40 shipping companies and vessels that operate as part of Iran’s shadow fleet.
China has said it opposes “illegal” unilateral sanctions. On Friday, its embassy in Washington said normal trade should not be harmed and called on Washington to stop “abusing” sanctions to target Chinese companies.
Hello and welcome to our live coverage of events in the Middle East, with Steve Witkoff and president Trump’s son-in-law headed to Pakistan in a bid to kickstart a new round of peace negotiations with Iran amid a fragile ceasefire, though the prospect of direct talks remained uncertain.
The White House said emissaries Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner would engage in an “in-person conversation” with Iranian representatives, but Iranian state media said that direct negotiations were not on the cards.
Here is a quick recap of the latest:
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