Lawsuit Accuses Washington of Sharing Information with Iran About Asylum Seekers

A view of the La Salle ICE detention facility where Mahmoud Khalil, a Columbia University student of Palestinian origin who was detained by US Department of Homeland Security agents, was transferred in Jena, Louisiana, US, March 12, 2025. REUTERS/Edmund D. Fountain
A view of the La Salle ICE detention facility where Mahmoud Khalil, a Columbia University student of Palestinian origin who was detained by US Department of Homeland Security agents, was transferred in Jena, Louisiana, US, March 12, 2025. REUTERS/Edmund D. Fountain
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Lawsuit Accuses Washington of Sharing Information with Iran About Asylum Seekers

A view of the La Salle ICE detention facility where Mahmoud Khalil, a Columbia University student of Palestinian origin who was detained by US Department of Homeland Security agents, was transferred in Jena, Louisiana, US, March 12, 2025. REUTERS/Edmund D. Fountain
A view of the La Salle ICE detention facility where Mahmoud Khalil, a Columbia University student of Palestinian origin who was detained by US Department of Homeland Security agents, was transferred in Jena, Louisiana, US, March 12, 2025. REUTERS/Edmund D. Fountain

A lawsuit filed Tuesday alleges that the Trump administration’s immigration agencies have been sharing confidential information about Iranian asylum seekers with the Iranian government, violating national immigration regulations and endangering countless Iranians, court filings argue.

The lawsuit depicts a coordinated campaign between the US and Iranian governments to identify Iranians in Immigration and Customs Enforcement custody and pressure them to return to Iran — a marked departure from decades of diplomatic hostility between the two governments and an ongoing war.

The Department of Homeland Security denied that it is sharing asylum application records with the Iranian government, according to The Associated Press.

Roughly 600 Iranians were put in immigration detention last year, according to public records obtained by the National Iranian American Council.

In June, an Iranian woman was among the two dozen migrants the US deported to the Central African Republic — in a marked departure from a decades-long practice by the US of welcoming Iranian dissidents, exiles and others since the 1979 Iranian Revolution forced a large number of Iranians to flee.

The US government is allowed to work with government officials of foreign countries to coordinate deportation logistics.

However, federal regulations passed in the late 1990s prohibit the government from sharing information that could reveal that the individual getting deported applied for asylum.

“Congress made these confidentiality protections mandatory precisely because lives depend on them, and no agency and no administration, of either party, may set them aside,” said Ali Rahnama, the interim executive director of Iranian American Legal Defense Fund.

Starting in March 2025, the US State Department arranged monthly meetings with Iranian officials, using the Pakistani embassy as an intermediary, in which US officials shared detailed, sensitive information about detained Iranian immigrants who the US government hoped to deport, lawyers for the Iranian American Legal Defense Fund and the Public Citizen Litigation Group wrote in a complaint.

The information included details about asylum applications filed by people who say they were persecuted for converting to Christianity, for their sexuality or for participating in the Women, Life, Freedom protests against the Iranian government in 2022, according to the lawsuit, which was filed in US District Court in Washington, DC.

ICE forced Iranian asylum applicants who had been detained in numerous facilities, mostly southern states, to meet with an Iranian government official who had extensive and specific knowledge about their applications, according to the complaint.

The information was shared even after the joint US-Israeli strikes on Iran started the Iran war in February 2026.

“Despite the US’s ongoing war with Iran, the administration seems more committed to mass deportation than protecting human lives,” Michael Kirkpatrick, attorney at Public Citizen Litigation Group said in a statement.

The complaint names the Department of Homeland Security, Secretary of State Marco Rubio, Secretary of Homeland Security Markwayne Mullin and the Department of State as some of the defendants.

The allegations come amid President Donald Trump’s ambitious and aggressive immigration crackdown that involved over 600,000 deportations and causing roughly 1.9 million immigrants to voluntarily leave in 2025 alone, according to an announcement made by DHS.

Iranian officials acknowledged in September 2025 that as many as 400 Iranians could be returned under an agreement with the Trump’s administration.

That month, the first of three deportation flights brought dozens of Iranians back to Iran.

The second deportation flight was in December 2025, and the final recorded deportation flight departed at the end of January 2026, roughly a month before the war on Iran started, and just weeks after the Iranian government killed thousands of citizens as part of a brutal crackdown on protests.

The New York Times reported at the time that some of those deported in the flights in September, December and January were asylum seekers.



Iraqi Cities Host Funeral Processions for Khamenei

Security personnel stand guard on the day of a funeral procession for Iran's late Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, who was killed on February 28 in Israeli and US airstrikes, in Najaf, Iraq, July 8, 2026. (Reuters)
Security personnel stand guard on the day of a funeral procession for Iran's late Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, who was killed on February 28 in Israeli and US airstrikes, in Najaf, Iraq, July 8, 2026. (Reuters)
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Iraqi Cities Host Funeral Processions for Khamenei

Security personnel stand guard on the day of a funeral procession for Iran's late Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, who was killed on February 28 in Israeli and US airstrikes, in Najaf, Iraq, July 8, 2026. (Reuters)
Security personnel stand guard on the day of a funeral procession for Iran's late Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, who was killed on February 28 in Israeli and US airstrikes, in Najaf, Iraq, July 8, 2026. (Reuters)

Crowds thronged the streets of Najaf on Wednesday as the coffin of Iran's supreme leader Ali Khamenei moved through the city in a procession devoted to Iraq.

Iran began six days of public funeral ceremonies for Khamenei on Saturday, including a dedicated day to neighboring Iraq, which has close ties to Tehran.

Tehran hopes the marathon ceremonies will project strength and unity after the Middle East war, which started with US-Israeli strikes that killed Khamenei and several relatives on February 28.

The procession in Najaf came as the United States and Iran renewed hostilities in the Strait of Hormuz, putting more pressure on a deal to end the war.

The US military said it had struck dozens of Iranian targets in response to Tehran's attacks on three ships in Hormuz, with Iran's Revolutionary Guards later saying they had hit US military facilities in Bahrain and Kuwait.

After a massive procession in Iran's city of Qom, Iraqi officials and senior politicians received the remains of Khamenei on Tuesday night at Najaf international airport in the presence of Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian and one of the late leader's sons.

Iraqi authorities declared Wednesday a public holiday, with procession ceremonies starting at at 6:00 am (0300 GMT) in Najaf.

A heavy security deployment was in place as the crowds swelled, with some people pushing close to touch Khamenei's coffin as it rode in the back of a truck en route to the shrine of Imam Ali, the Prophet Mohammed's son-in-law.

At the shrine, dozens of clerics stood ready to pray over the coffin before it was carried on to the city of Karbala.

Khamenei's final burial will take place on Thursday in his hometown of Mashhad in northeast Iran.

His eldest son Mostafa Khamenei was present at the airport on Tuesday, but his successor Mojtaba Khamenei, named supreme leader shortly after his father's killing, has not appeared in public and has only communicated through written statements since his nomination.

Iraqi Mohammed al-Bayati, 30, who travelled for hours to Najaf, said it was "an opportunity not to be missed to participate in the funeral of the person who challenged the power of America and Israel".

Najaf is the main center of Shiite religious seminaries, and is also home to Ali Sistani, Iraq's top Shiite religious authority.

Many senior Shiite clerics have studied, taught or lived there, including Khamenei's predecessor Khomeini.

After Najaf, Khamenei's body will be flown to Karbala, about 60 kilometers north, for another procession.

In Karbala, one banner read "we bid you farewell" and another displayed Khamenei's photo with the caption, "the one who humiliated America".

In both cities, hundreds of volunteer-run stalls serving food and drinks to mourners lined the procession routes.

Iranian state media quoted Esmail Qaani, head of the Guards' Quds Force, as saying: "The extensive planning for this historical event by the Iraqi government and people show the depth of the spiritual bond between the two great nations of Iraq and Iran to the whole world."


Denmark Says Ready to Defend ‘Every Inch of NATO', Including Danish Kingdom

08 July 2026, Türkiye, Ankara: Mette Frederiksen, Prime Minister of Denmark, speaks to the press ahead of the NATO Summit and the meeting of the North Atlantic Council in Ankara. Photo: Michael Kappeler/dpa
08 July 2026, Türkiye, Ankara: Mette Frederiksen, Prime Minister of Denmark, speaks to the press ahead of the NATO Summit and the meeting of the North Atlantic Council in Ankara. Photo: Michael Kappeler/dpa
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Denmark Says Ready to Defend ‘Every Inch of NATO', Including Danish Kingdom

08 July 2026, Türkiye, Ankara: Mette Frederiksen, Prime Minister of Denmark, speaks to the press ahead of the NATO Summit and the meeting of the North Atlantic Council in Ankara. Photo: Michael Kappeler/dpa
08 July 2026, Türkiye, Ankara: Mette Frederiksen, Prime Minister of Denmark, speaks to the press ahead of the NATO Summit and the meeting of the North Atlantic Council in Ankara. Photo: Michael Kappeler/dpa

Denmark is ready to defend every inch of NATO, including the kingdom of Denmark, Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen said in Ankara on Wednesday, a day after President Donald Trump reiterated that Greenland should be controlled ⁠by the US.

Trump's ⁠assertions that the US must acquire or control Greenland, a semi-autonomous Danish territory, have long strained relations between Washington and Copenhagen — ⁠both founding NATO members — and more broadly US ties with Europe. The issue has since moved to a diplomatic track.

"We are ready to defend every inch of NATO, including our own territory ... Of course we will defend the kingdom ⁠of Denmark," ⁠Frederiksen said, reiterating that Greenland was not for sale.

"One of the reasons why we have built NATO many, many years ago, is if anything happens to one of us, then everybody should stand up for each other," she said.


Protests Break Out in Havana as Cuba Struggles to Restore Electricity

People protest against power outages in Havana, Cuba, 07 July 2026.  EPA/Ernesto Mastrascusa
People protest against power outages in Havana, Cuba, 07 July 2026. EPA/Ernesto Mastrascusa
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Protests Break Out in Havana as Cuba Struggles to Restore Electricity

People protest against power outages in Havana, Cuba, 07 July 2026.  EPA/Ernesto Mastrascusa
People protest against power outages in Havana, Cuba, 07 July 2026. EPA/Ernesto Mastrascusa

Scattered protests broke out across Havana on Tuesday evening, with residents banging pots, honking horns and shouting "turn on the lights" as millions of Cubans remained without power amid a six-month-long US fuel blockade.

Cuba experienced a nationwide outage on Monday — its third this year — but while authorities said most of the country had been reconnected to the island's grid by late Tuesday, many remained in the dark and without electricity as the island doesn't have enough fuel, Reuters reported.

The country's grid operator UNE said ⁠it had reconnected ⁠the grid from Pinar del Rio, in far western Cuba, to Holguin in the east. Santiago de Cuba, the island's second-largest city, remained disconnected and without power, authorities said.

The US in January cut off Cuba's fuel supply, then imposed fresh sanctions that have prompted an exodus of foreign businesses and a near-complete collapse of tourism in a bid to force the island's government to the negotiating table.

The US is seeking ⁠to upend Cuba's communist-run government and has called for democratic elections and the release of "political" prisoners.

Cuba and the United Nations say US President Donald Trump's sanctions are a violation of international law and the human rights of the island's residents.

Hundreds of exhausted residents in the outlying Havana neighborhoods of Jaimanitas and Santa Fe took to the streets while others sat on doorsteps and sidewalks during the hot night, playing dominoes or chatting with neighbors while waiting for power to be restored.

Many, now accustomed to blackouts spanning 30 hours or more, had largely resigned themselves to another night of swatting mosquitoes and little sleep.

"I don't see a quick fix to this ⁠problem," said Amauri Gonzalez, ⁠a local resident who had stepped outside his home for a bit of fresh air. "Our power plants are obsolete and there's no fuel."

In some areas of Santa Fe, the power returned shortly after the pot-banging began, sending protesters scurrying to their homes to take advantage.

According to both Cuban and US officials, talks between the two nations have stagnated.

US Ambassador to the United Nations Michael Waltz told a Tuesday debate on US sanctions at the UN General Assembly that Cuba's government was to blame for the electricity shortfalls.

"Change your ways and turn the lights back on for your people," he said.

The vast majority of countries that spoke during the debate, however, called on Washington to end the blockade and reverse the sanctions that have crippled the island's economy.