Last Trump: The President sanctions the main court that has an arrest warrant opposite to Netanyahu

By Yousra Elbagir, correspondent from Africa

A woman walks to security guards outside the doors a sexual physical conditioning clinic funded by USAID in the neighborhood of the center of Johannesburg.

She looks around confusion and we will know that the clinic is closed.

She tells us that only two months have passed since she arrived here to get her old care.

Now he has to hurry to locate a certain position for his projections of sexual physical conditioning and his prophylaxis prior to the exhibition (preparation): his normal defense opposed the rampant HIV.

On the day he was sworn in as U. S. president for a moment, Donald Trump signed an executive order freezing foreign aid for a 90-day era.

This is being discussed through federal labor unions in court over what it says are “unconstitutional and illegal actions” that have created a “global humanitarian crisis. “

However, the order already has a warning has an effect on the maximum vulnerable of South Africa.

Read on here…

Trump paused all US foreign aid on the day of his inauguration and his administration plans to keep fewer than 300 USAID employees out of more than 10,000, sources told Reuters.

The judgment indicates that Trump’s “unconstitutional and illegal moves” have created a “global humanitarian crisis” and that Congress is the entity that can legally dismantle USAID.

“The agency’s cave had disastrous humanitarian consequences,” he said, through the final efforts to fight to oppose malaria and HIV.  

“Already, three hundred young children who would not have had HIV now.  

“Thousands of women and they will die from pregnancy and childbirth. “

Trump Freeze’s foreign aid has also left 500,000 metric tons of food $ 340 million to combat world hunger in limbo.

The projection of the main humanitarian aid firm of Washington supervised through Elon Musk.

Mass layoffs of staff would well kill a company that has helped save tens of millions of people around the world from dying, said John Atwood, who has been the leader of USAID for more than six years.

“That’s outrageous,” he said, adding: “A lot of people will not survive.”

The agency provided aid to some 130 countries in 2023, manyof them shattered by conflict and deeply impoverished. 

The most sensible receptors were Ukraine, followed by Ethiopia, Jordan, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Somalia, Yemen and Afghanistan.

Welcome back to our live coverage of Donald Trump’s first 100 days in office.

Before resuming our updates and analysis, here are the advances that have taken their position for more than 24 hours.

That is all for the day of our live policy of the first hundred days of Donald Trump as president of the United States.

We will return the morning with additional updates.  

Before you sign, here’s a review of what’s happening in the 24 hours beyond 24 hours:

Trump signed three executive orders yesterday, including sanctioning the International Criminal Court and targeting “anti-Christian bias” in federal government.

He also ordered a review of funding to all non-governmental organisations that rely on federal cash.

In other news:

We’ve just seen Donald Trump sign an executive order which included sanctions on the International Criminal Court (see 21.56 post).

But it is not the first time that the president of the United States imposed sanctions on the Court.

In June 2020, when Trump 3 years after his first term as president, he placed opposite sanctions to the senior CPI officials, while the court investigated whether the United States committed war crimes in Afghanistan.

Under the order, the US could block assets of ICC employees and prevent them from entering the country – a move the court said was an attack on justice and the rule of law.

Former US Secretary of State Antony Blinken described the sanctions, which were lifted in April 2021, as “inappropriate and ineffective”.

By Sam Doak and Olive Enokido-Lineham, OSINT producers

Previously, the Guantanamo Migrant Operations Centre (MOC) held primarily migrants picked up by US authorities at sea.

Under new plans, it is set to house thousands of migrants accused of committing crimes, who the Trump administration has branded “the worst of the worst”.

Satellite images captured on 4 February by Planet Labs show preparations at the site on the island of Cuba have been carried out at a rapid pace.

Three areas have been readied for arrivals, with tents springing up across the facility.

Meta chief executive Mark Zuckerberg has been at the White House today for meetings.

Posting on social media site X, Meta spokesman Andy Stone said Zuckerberg was in attendance to “discuss how Meta can help the administration defend and advance American tech abroad”.

Zuckerberg was in attendance at Donald Trump’s inauguration last month, with Meta saying last week it would pay $25m to end a lawsuit from Trump over the suspension of his accounts following the 6 January 2021 riot at the Capitol.

Donald Trump has just signed an executive order targeting “eradicating anti-Christian bias” in the federal government.

“This is the policy of the United States and the goal of this order for the devout freedoms of Americans and to end the government’s anti-Christian weapon,” he said.

The order says it will continue anti-Christian violence and vandalism and “work tirelessly to maintain” freedom.

He added that Attorney General Pam Bondi will direct a working group to eliminate the “anti -Christian bias” in the federal government.

Trump has not cited specific examples of this bias but has previously claimed the Biden administration used the federal government to target Christians specifically.

It is time to present “other options for the people of Gaza,” Danny Danon, Israel’s permanent representative to the United Nations, has said.

Speaking about the global with Yalda Hakim, Danon said that “many leaders in everything global” were talking in the call of the Palestinians, but “never discovered genuine solutions. “

“I think many other people in Gaza, if they get them to offer other puts and begin a new life, I think many of them would do that option,” he said.

“It’s about time to think about real solutions, about new out-of-the-box ideas,” he added.

Speaking on what the future of Gaza holds, Danon said Israel has “no intention” to stay in Gaza.

“We returned to Gaza because we had no selection after October 7,” he said.

“We still have the hostages held captive, but for the long gaza streak, I think it’s time to think about other options.

“Hamas will not remain there, and I think we accommodate the participation of more countries to take genuine measures for the long execution of Gaza. “

Donald Trump has signed an order that sanctions the International Criminal Court (ICC).

The order includes monetary sanctions and visa restrictions opposed to the CPI officials and their circle of relatives who have helped investigate American citizens or allies.

The ordinance affirms that the CPI has been involved in “illegitimate and basisless movements in the United States and our near Israel”,

He indicates that the ICC “still abused its strength by issuing without foundation arrest mandates” Benjamin Netanyahu and former Israel Minister Yoav Gallant.

For context: The ICC has issued arrest warrants for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, former Defense Minister Yoav Gallant, and several Hamas leaders last November.

The court said there was reason to believe Netanyahu and Gallant used “starvation as a method of warfare” by restricting humanitarian aid and intentionally targeting civilians in Israel’s campaign in Gaza – something Israeli officials dismissed as false and antisemitic.

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