Pope Francis Tells US Bishops Trump's Immigration Policy 'Will End Badly'

Pope Francis attends the weekly general audience, in Paul VI hall at the Vatican, February 5, 2025. REUTERS/Remo Casilli/File Photo
Pope Francis attends the weekly general audience, in Paul VI hall at the Vatican, February 5, 2025. REUTERS/Remo Casilli/File Photo
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Pope Francis Tells US Bishops Trump's Immigration Policy 'Will End Badly'

Pope Francis attends the weekly general audience, in Paul VI hall at the Vatican, February 5, 2025. REUTERS/Remo Casilli/File Photo
Pope Francis attends the weekly general audience, in Paul VI hall at the Vatican, February 5, 2025. REUTERS/Remo Casilli/File Photo

Pope Francis sharply criticized US President Donald Trump's immigration crackdown in an unusual open letter to America's Catholic bishops on Tuesday, saying criminalising migrants and taking measures built on force "will end badly".

The pope, who last month called Trump's plan to deport millions of migrants a "disgrace", said it was wrong to assume that all undocumented immigrants were criminals, Reuters reported.

"I exhort all the faithful of the Catholic Church ... not to give in to narratives that discriminate against and cause unnecessary suffering to our migrant and refugee brothers and sisters," said the pontiff.

Francis, pope since 2013, has long been critical of Trump's immigration policies. In 2016, during Trump's first White House campaign, the pope said Trump was "not Christian" in his views on immigration.

In his letter on Tuesday, Francis called the immigration crackdown a "major crisis" for the US.

"What is built on the basis of force, and not on the truth about the equal dignity of every human being, begins badly and will end badly," he said.

Trump, a Republican who was president in 2017-2021, won a second non-consecutive term promising to deport millions of immigrants who are in the US illegally.

After taking office last month, he issued a flurry of executive actions to redirect military resources to support the mass deportation effort and empowered US immigration officers to make more arrests, including at schools, churches and hospitals.

In Tuesday's letter, Francis also appeared to respond indirectly to Vice President JD Vance's defense of the deportations.

Vance, a Catholic, defended the crackdown in a January social media post by referring to an early Catholic theological concept known as the "ordo amoris", or "order of love", to suggest that Catholics must give priority to non-immigrants.

The pope said: "The true 'ordo amoris' that must be promoted (is) ... by meditating on the love that builds a fraternity open to all, without exception."



Seven Injured, Man Arrested after Car Hits Pedestrians in UK

Police officers work near to a variety of personal items seen covering the road inside a cordon set up on Friar Gate in central Derby, central England on March 29, 2026, following an incident the night before where was vehicle has driven into pedestrians. (Photo by Darren Staples / AFP)
Police officers work near to a variety of personal items seen covering the road inside a cordon set up on Friar Gate in central Derby, central England on March 29, 2026, following an incident the night before where was vehicle has driven into pedestrians. (Photo by Darren Staples / AFP)
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Seven Injured, Man Arrested after Car Hits Pedestrians in UK

Police officers work near to a variety of personal items seen covering the road inside a cordon set up on Friar Gate in central Derby, central England on March 29, 2026, following an incident the night before where was vehicle has driven into pedestrians. (Photo by Darren Staples / AFP)
Police officers work near to a variety of personal items seen covering the road inside a cordon set up on Friar Gate in central Derby, central England on March 29, 2026, following an incident the night before where was vehicle has driven into pedestrians. (Photo by Darren Staples / AFP)

British police said on Sunday seven people had suffered "serious but not life-threatening injuries" after a car was driven into pedestrians in a central England city, with one man arrested.

Officers arrested the man in his 30s shortly after the incident in Derby, located about 40 miles (64 kilometers) north of Birmingham, Derbyshire Police said in an update.

"He was arrested on suspicion of attempted murder, causing serious injury through dangerous driving, inflicting grievous bodily harm with intent, and dangerous driving," the force added.

"The investigation into the circumstances surrounding the incident are ongoing and we are keeping an open mind as to the motives."

The car, a black Suzuki Swift, struck the pedestrians at about 9:30 pm (2130 GMT) on Saturday, according to police.

The seven people hurt were treated at the scene by ambulance crews and taken to Royal Derby Hospital and Queen's Medical Centrer in the nearby city of Nottingham, the force's update said.

"The seven suffered a range of serious but not life-threatening injuries and we can confirm that, contrary to online speculation, no-one died in the incident," Derbyshire police noted.

The force had earlier said it did not believe there was an ongoing risk to the public.

Derby North MP Catherine Atkinson said she was "deeply shocked".

"My thoughts are with those injured and I'm grateful to our emergency services," she said on social media.

"Please follow police advice and avoid the area. Anyone who has information should contact hem as soon as possible."


Hundreds of Israelis Protest against War, Clash with Police

Israeli police disperse anti-war protests in Tel Aviv and some other Israeli cities. Ilia YEFIMOVICH / AFP
Israeli police disperse anti-war protests in Tel Aviv and some other Israeli cities. Ilia YEFIMOVICH / AFP
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Hundreds of Israelis Protest against War, Clash with Police

Israeli police disperse anti-war protests in Tel Aviv and some other Israeli cities. Ilia YEFIMOVICH / AFP
Israeli police disperse anti-war protests in Tel Aviv and some other Israeli cities. Ilia YEFIMOVICH / AFP

Hundreds gathered in Tel Aviv and some other Israeli cities on Saturday to protest the war in the Middle East, in unauthorized demonstrations that security forces sought to disperse.

Weekly protests against the war launched by Israel and the United States against Iran on February 28 have been taking place in Tel Aviv and elsewhere, initially drawing only a few dozen participants, said AFP.

Numbers now appear to be rising, though they are far from the tens of thousands who filled the streets last year to protest the war in Gaza.

A number of former parliamentarians and prominent left-wing organizations joined Saturday's rallies, including Standing Together, Peace Now and Women Wage Peace.

AFP footage showed law enforcement officers removing demonstrators in Tel Aviv. Similar scenes were filmed by activists in the northern city of Haifa.

Under wartime security guidelines, gatherings of more than 50 people are prohibited in Israel, as the country faces daily barrages of missiles and rockets from Iran and Lebanon.

A spokesperson for one of the organizing groups told AFP that the protests had not been authorized.

In Tel Aviv, AFP journalists reported that security forces pushed back some demonstrators forcefully, knocking several to the ground while at least one protester was held in a chokehold.

The Israeli police said the "illegal demonstration" was dispersed after a Home Front Command representative clarified that such a gathering was prohibited under emergency regulations.

Police said 13 people were arrested in the city.

Another five were detained in Haifa, where "rioters began blocking the road and did not comply with the officers' instructions", police said.

Organizers from the Jewish-Arab activist group Standing Together said in a statement that police had been "instructed to carry out arrests and silence dissent", adding that "the government fears the expansion of the protest movement".

"We are four weeks into the war, and nobody actually knows what is the aim," said Yoram, a 52-year old tour guide who declined to give his last name, at the beginning of the Tel Aviv rally.

"No one's thought how the hell we're going to get out of it, and there's no end in sight," said Joanne Levine, 76, adding that in her view the war was part of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's "game plan".

Public support for the war against Iran remains high in Israel. A poll published Friday by the Israel Democracy Institute found that 78 percent of Jewish Israelis back the war -- compared to just 19 percent among the Arab Israeli minority.

However, the share of those opposed has grown from four percent in early March to 11.5 percent now, the institute found.


Helplines Buzz with Alerts from Seafarers Trapped in War

Seafarers operate the cargo ships and tankers on which global trade relies. CN-STR/AFP
Seafarers operate the cargo ships and tankers on which global trade relies. CN-STR/AFP
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Helplines Buzz with Alerts from Seafarers Trapped in War

Seafarers operate the cargo ships and tankers on which global trade relies. CN-STR/AFP
Seafarers operate the cargo ships and tankers on which global trade relies. CN-STR/AFP

Seafarers' helplines say they are overwhelmed with messages from crews stuck in the Gulf by the Middle East war, desperately seeking repatriation, compensation and onboard supplies.

"Writing to urgently inform you that our vessel is currently facing a critical situation regarding provisions and one crew health conditions," read an email from one seafarer on March 24 to the International Transport Workers' Federation (ITF)'s Seafarer Support team.

"Immediate supply of food, drinking water, basic necessities is required to sustain the crew," said the message to the team's helpline.

The ITF said it had received more than 1,000 emails and messages from seafarers stuck around the Strait of Hormuz and the wider region since the war erupted with US-Israeli strikes on Iran on February 28.

- Bomb strikes -

Some sought to clarify what their rights are while navigating a war zone, while others sent videos of bombings striking next to their ship and asked the federation for help to get off board, according to ITF documents seen by AFP.

"It is an extraordinary situation, there is a lot of panic," Mohamed Arrachedi, ITF's Network Coordinator for the Arab World and Iran, in charge of handling requests from seafarers in the region, told AFP, describing the situation as "really shocking".

"I get calls from seafarers at two o'clock, three o'clock in the morning. They call me the minute they have access to the internet," Arrachedi said on Wednesday by telephone from Spain.

"One seafarer called in a panic, saying: 'We are here bombed. We don't want to die. Please help me, sir. Please get us from here."

About 20,000 seafarers are currently stuck in the Gulf, according to the UN's maritime body, known as the IMO, and at least eight seafarers or dock workers have died in incidents in the region since February 28.

All correspondence was shared with AFP on condition of anonymity, as the helpline guarantees confidentiality to seafarers.

- War zone rights -

The International Bargaining Forum (IBF), a global maritime labor body, has declared the area a war zone.

This normally gives seafarers exceptional rights, including repatriation at the company's cost and double pay for those working on ships covered by IBF agreements -- around 15,000 vessels worldwide, according to the ITF.

Despite this, many seafarers -- especially on ships without such labor agreements -- are reporting difficulties with getting repatriated.

In one email sent to the ITF on March 18, a seafarer said the ship's operator was ignoring crews' requests to leave, arguing that there were no flights from Iraq and refusing alternative routes.

"They are forcing us to continue to do cargo operations and STS (ship-to-ship operations) even (when) we raise our concerns about our safety and we are in war like area. They are keeping us in a position with no options," read the email seen by AFP.

The International Seafarers' Welfare and Assistance Network (ISWAN), another organization operating a helpline, told AFP on Wednesday that it had seen "a 15-20 percent increase in calls and messages" since the start of the war, with a third relating to repatriation difficulties.

- $16 a day -

Another major concern is compensation.

"About 50 percent of emails we receive concern pay," Lucian Craciun, one of five members of ITF's support team processing requests at the organization's headquarters in London, told AFP.

He said many seafarers choose to stay on board despite the dangerous conditions because they cannot afford to leave.

One email seen by AFP came from a seafarer asking to confirm whether his salary would go from $16 a day to $32 because he was in a designated war zone.

The ITF says such low salaries indicate that the shipowners do not have labor agreements in place to ensure decent pay.

Seafarers working under such arrangements are particularly at risk because their contracts often do not cover operations in war zones, and owners tend not to respond to requests from organizations such as the ITF, according to the support team.

When that happens, the ITF reaches out to the flag states and, if that does not work, to the state port authority where the vessel is located.

Arrachedi said that many such cases in the Gulf are still unresolved, with seafarers desperately awaiting responses from operators.