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Greg Gutfeld: We are very pro-immigrant, we are against illegal immigration and line-cutting – Fox News

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Fox News host Greg Gutfeld claimed America is "pro-immigrant" and against "line-cutting" on the "The Five."

NUMBER OF ILLEGAL MIGRANTS WHO ENTERED US SINCE BIDEN TOOK OFFICE APPROACHING TWO MILLION

GREG GUTFELD: You hit the nail on the head. You get the sense we've done these, this story for years. You get the sense that no one's listening but our audience. And I think it's because the media only cares about the optics if it can be tethered to Republicans or to law enforcement, hence going after the Border Patrol agent. They could pin that on law enforcement, even though, so they didn't have to say it was Biden's fault. So the only way to fix this is to elect a Republican, but not for the right reasons, because, you know, not because the Republicans will fix it, but because the media will then do their job when a Republican is in charge and there are migrant drownings and there are 300 fentanyl deaths a day. Then if they can pin that on a Republican; then it's a story. Because, remember what happened to the kids in cages? How miraculously that went away when Trump went away and how it didn't matter under Obama.

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Greg Gutfeld: We are very pro-immigrant, we are against illegal immigration and line-cutting - Fox News

Next Level Abortion Hub: CA Launches $1M Website to Promote Abortion for Out-of-State Teens, Illegal Immigrants, Everyone – CBN.com

The state of California launched a publicly funded website Tuesday to promote the state's abortion services.

The state budgeted $200 million of taxpayer money to strengthen access to abortion in California, including $1 million to build a website promoting the state's abortion services.

That website went live Tuesday, following an announcement from Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom.

"Abortion is legal, safe, and accessible here in California whether or not you live here, know that we have your back," Newsom said in a news release.

The website includes information on different types of abortion and how to get one. The site has sections devoted to people who live outside of California and immigrants who are living in the country without legal permission, saying federal policies keep immigration officials away from health care facilities.

It lists clinics, links to financial help for travel and lodging, and also lets teenagers in other states know they don't need their parent's permission to get an abortion in the state. There's also a map showing the location of 166 abortion clinics statewide, including Planned Parenthood offices.

The website is part of Newsom's earlier pledge to make California a national hub for women seeking abortions now that the U.S. Supreme Court has overturned Roe v. Wade the landmark 1973 decision that legalized abortion nationwide for nearly 50 years.

As a result of the high court's decision, state legislatures can decide whether to ban abortion or place restrictions on it.

Pro-life advocates and other critics have lamented the use of public funds to boost such services, arguing California has a myriad of other problems more deserving of public funding, including the state's electrical grid and the continuing threat of wildfires.

As CBN News reported last week, California issued an emergency warning as a recent heat wave threatens the Golden State's power grid. A brutal heat wave was smothering the state for weeks, pushing it to the brink of blackouts.

The heat has also been fueling deadly wildfires. Firefighters are making progress against the week-old Mosquito Fire located about 110 miles northeast of San Francisco.

The fire was 20% contained after destroying at least 70 homes and other buildings. The 100-square-mile (258-square-kilometer) blaze on Wednesday surpassed the size of the previous largest conflagration in 2022 - the McKinney Fire - although this season has seen a fraction of last year's wildfire activity so far.

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Next Level Abortion Hub: CA Launches $1M Website to Promote Abortion for Out-of-State Teens, Illegal Immigrants, Everyone - CBN.com

Afghanistan: Taliban torture and execute Hazaras in targeted attack new investigation – Amnesty International

Taliban fighters killed six Hazara people in a deliberate attack on the ethnic minority group in Afghanistans Ghor province, Amnesty International said today following a new investigation.

On 26 June 2022, the Taliban detained and unlawfully executed four men during a night raid operation in search of a former security official. The body of at least one of those executed showed signs of torture. A woman and a 12-year-old girl were also killed during the raid.

The attack is part of a wider pattern of unlawful targeted killings of people whom the Taliban perceives as adversaries, in this case being both members of the Hazara community and those who were associated with the former Afghan government.

These violent deaths are further shocking proof that the Taliban continue to persecute, torture and extrajudicially execute Hazara people.

The Taliban must immediately end this cruel pattern of targeted killings and, as the de facto authorities, ensure the protection of all Afghans, said Agns Callamard, Amnesty Internationals Secretary General.

The Taliban must investigate these killings and ensure that those responsible are prosecuted in accordance with international human rights obligations and standards. If the de facto authorities cannot provide justice, the Prosecutor of the International Criminal Court should immediately open full investigations into all cases of extrajudicial executions. In addition, along with the UN Special Rapporteur on the situation in Afghanistan, Amnesty International calls for an independent accountability mechanism in and for Afghanistan.

Amnesty International documented similar extrajudicial executions of Hazara people in Ghazni province in July 2021, and Daykundi province in August 2021. Despite publicly promising not to target former government officials, the Taliban have still not investigated or prosecuted anyone for the killings.

Amnesty International conducted eight remote interviews, including with witnesses to the June 2022 attack, analyzed 38 photos and three videos that were taken in the aftermath of the attack, consulted a forensic pathologist to review the images of the bodies, and reviewed satellite imagery of the area to confirm the location of one of the killings. Several of the photos analyzed were published online by Taliban media, including the Ghor Province Governor Media Office, which deleted the post soon after publication.

On the night of 26 June 2022, Taliban forces raided the home of Mohamad Muradi, a Hazara man and security official under the former government who had also previously led a Peoples Uprising Program force a local militia against the Taliban in 2020 and 2021.

Muradi had recently returned to his home in Chahar Asyab, in the Lal wa Sarjangal district in Ghor province, after failing in an attempt to flee to Iran, and then hiding in other cities around the country. Like many who had been involved in Taliban opposition, Muradi had not taken up the offer of a personalized amnesty letter often issued to former security and government officials, offering permission to return home in exchange for a promise to lay down arms due to the fear of reprisal attacks by the Taliban.

Witnesses told Amnesty International that, on the night of the attack, Taliban forces fired rifles and rocket-propelled grenades at Muradis home, killing Taj Gul Muradi, his 22-year-old daughter, who had studied medicine and had been providing health care in the community. The attack wounded Muradi and two of Muradis other children, a son and his 12-year-old daughter. The girl suffered severe stomach injuries and died the next day.

Muradis left leg was injured, and he surrendered to Taliban forces through the intervention of local elders. However, the Taliban then dragged him outside of the house and shot him dead. An analysis of photos of Muradis body shows damage to the front of his shirt, indicating a likely chest wound, and an exit wound in his forehead.

Amnesty International reviewed photos and videos that show damage to Muradis home consistent with witness testimony. The images were also geolocated by analyzing visible features including vegetation, nearby pavements and the buildings layout and satellite imagery.

Three other men who had been staying at Muradis home were detained and then extrajudicially executed. Two of them, like Muradi, had previously been members of the Peoples Uprising Program force, though none had taken part in fighting with the militia for some time.

Ghulam Haider Mohammadi, Muradis nephew, had been visiting relatives. Photos of Mohammadis body indicate that he was executed with at least one gunshot to head, while kneeling and with his hands bound behind him. Locals found his body approximately 50 meters from Muradis home, left between some rocks in a tree-covered area.

Witnesses told Amnesty International that the other two victims named Asif Rezayee and Arif Sangaree were put in a vehicle and driven away to be killed in a separate location. The bodies of the two men were later discovered in an uninhabited part of Takeghal, more than 30 minutes drive from where they were initially detained.

Asif Rezayee had been living in Kabul but had returned to his home village a few days prior to visit family members. Rezayee was executed by gunfire while his hands were cuffed behind his back. Photos and a video of his body show four distinct gunshot wounds, to the head, chest, right thigh, and left hand. Based upon the nature of the wounds, apparent bullet trajectory, and gun powder stains, the wounds to the leg and hand were done at close range prior to execution. Such intentional infliction of pain on a bound detainee constitutes torture, a crime under international law.

Photos indicate that Arif Sangaree was also executed while bound and detained, with at least one close range shot to the head. One of the photos posted by the Taliban to Facebook, claiming credit for the successful operation, shows Sangaree with a significant facial wound surrounded by fresh bright red arterial blood, indicating the Taliban took the photo immediately after his death. In contrast, photos provided by people who discovered the body show Sangaree with the identical wound, but the blood dark and dried, meaning time had passed.

The Taliban news sources that posted the image of Arif Sangerees body described the night raid as a targeted operation that culminated in a fight between rebels and Mujahideen, or the Taliban. The account claimed seven rebels had been killed, detained and wounded, and that one Taliban member was killed, with two others wounded.

To justify the deaths, the statement went on to say that the raid had occurred after fighters associated with Mawlavi Mahadi, the Hazara leader of a Taliban defector group, had attacked the Taliban in Balkhab district of Sar-e-Pul province, and then fled and established themselves in the village of Chahar Asyab. This Taliban statement is incorrect. While this fighting has been documented by the UN Special Rapporteur on the situation in Afghanistan in his 6 September 2022 report, which includes cases of Taliban executions of fighters hors de combat, Muradi and his family members were not members of Mahadis group or taking part in this round of attacks. Rather, Amnesty International believes the Taliban justification is a pretext for targeting ethnic minorities and soldiers associated with the former government.

The Taliban must immediately cease these acts of revenge and ensure employees of the former government and their families can live safely in Afghanistan

Background

The Taliban seized power in Afghanistan following the collapse of the government in mid-August 2021. Amnesty International has called for the protection of thousands of Afghans at serious risk of Taliban reprisals. There have been numerous cases of raids and extrajudicial executions targeting those the Taliban perceives as adversaries those affiliated with the former government particularly Hazaras/Shias or those fighting with the National Resistance Front (NRF).

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Afghanistan: Taliban torture and execute Hazaras in targeted attack new investigation - Amnesty International

The United States and Partners Announce Establishment of Fund for the People of Afghanistan – United States Department of State – Department of State

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The United States, through the Department of the Treasury and the Department of State, and in coordination with international partners including the government of Switzerland and Afghan economic experts, today announced the establishment of a fund to benefit the people of Afghanistan, or the Afghan Fund.

The United States remains committed to supporting the people of Afghanistan amidst ongoing economic and humanitarian crises. Pursuant to Executive Order (E.O.) 14064, President Biden set a policy of enabling $3.5 billion of Afghan central bank reserves to be used for the benefit of the people of Afghanistan while keeping them out of the hands of the Taliban and other malign actors. The Afghan Fund will protect, preserve, and make targeted disbursements of that $3.5 billion to help provide greater stability to the Afghan economy.

The Taliban are not a part of the Afghan Fund, and robust safeguards have been put in place to prevent the funds from being used for illicit activity. The Afghan Fund will maintain its account with the Bank for International Settlements (BIS) based in Switzerland. The BIS is an international financial organization that provides a range of financial services, including banking services to central banks, monetary authorities and international financial institutions (seewww.bis.org). An external auditor will monitor and audit the Afghan Fund as required by Swiss law.

The people of Afghanistan face humanitarian and economic crises born of decades of conflict, severe drought, COVID-19, and endemic corruption, said Wendy Sherman, United States Deputy Secretary of State. Today, the United States and its partners take an important, concrete step forward in ensuring that additional resources can be brought to bear to reduce suffering and improve economic stability for the people of Afghanistan while continuing to hold the Taliban accountable.

The Afghan Fund will help mitigate the economic challenges facing Afghanistan while protecting and preserving $3.5 billion in reserves from Da Afghanistan Bank (DAB),Afghanistans central bank, for the benefit of the people of Afghanistan, said Wally Adeyemo, United States Deputy Secretary of the Treasury. The Talibans repression and economicmismanagement have exacerbated longstanding economic challenges for Afghanistan, includingthrough actions that have diminished the capacity of key Afghan economic institutions and madethe return of these funds to Afghanistan untenable. Through this Fund, the United States willwork closely with our international partners to facilitate use of these assets to improve the livesof ordinary people in Afghanistan.

In response to the critical challenges facing the people of Afghanistan, the United States isalready the largest donor of humanitarian assistance, Sherman also noted. We have workedwith the World Bank and Asian Development Bank to make available more than $1 billion inassistance for basic services and other urgent needs, in addition to providing over $814 million inU.S. humanitarian aid directly to implementing partners to support the Afghan people whilepreventing funds from benefiting the Taliban. Now, the Afghan Fund will be part of our ongoingdiplomatic and humanitarian efforts on behalf of the people of Afghanistan.

According to the World Bank, income and economic output in Afghanistan have fallen 20-30percent, imports have declined by approximately 40 percent, and about 70 percent of Afghanhouseholds report they are unable to fully meet basic food or non-food needs. Disbursementsfrom the Afghan Fund could include keeping Afghanistan current on its debt payments tointernational financial institutions, which would preserve their eligibility for developmentassistance, and paying for critical imports, such as electricity.

ADDITIONAL BACKGROUND

Central Bank of Afghanistan (DAB)When the Taliban took over Kabul, Afghanistans central bank, DAB, lost access to its accountsat financial institutions around the worldnot just in the United Statesbecause of theuncertainty regarding who could authorize transactions on DABs accounts. Since then, theeconomic situation in Afghanistan has continued to deteriorate due to the Talibans pooreconomic management and failure to restore critical capabilities to DAB, such as adequate anti-money laundering and countering terrorist finance (AML/CFT) controls.

To rebuild confidence among the international financial community, DAB must demonstrate thatit has the expertise, capacity, and independence to responsibly perform the duties of a centralbank. To move toward that goal, DAB must demonstrate that it is free from political interference,has appropriate AML/CFT controls in place, and has undertaken a third-party needs assessmentand onboarded a third-party monitor.

The Afghan FundThe Afghan Fund is incorporated as a Swiss foundation established to protect, preserve, andona targeted basisdisburse $3.5 billion for the benefit of the Afghan people. The Afghan Fundcan also serve as a vehicle to protect and disburse other Afghan central bank foreign reservescurrently held in additional countries. These disbursements are intended to help address the acuteeffects of Afghanistans economic and humanitarian crises by supporting Afghanistansmacroeconomic and financial stability.

Location of AssetsThe Afghan Fund will maintain its account with the Bank for International Settlements (BIS). The BIS is an established international financial organization that provides a range of financial services, including banking services to central banks, monetary authorities and international financial institutions. See http://www.bis.org.

The BIS will act as intermediary bank and will not be involved in the governance of the Afghan Fund or perform any related functions such as approving disbursements.

Use of the FundsIn the short-term, the Board of Trustees of the Afghan Fund will have the ability to authorize targeted disbursements to promote monetary and macroeconomic stability and benefit the Afghan people. This could include paying for critical imports like electricity, paying Afghanistans arrears at international financial institutions to preserve their eligibility for financial support, paying for essential central banking services like SWIFT payments, and others.

In the long-term, the goal is for funds not used for these limited purposes to be preserved to return to DAB. The United States has made clear that we will not support the return of these funds until DAB: (1) Demonstrates its independence from political influence and interference; (2) Demonstrates it has instituted adequate anti-money laundering and countering-the-financing-of-terrorism (AML/CFT) controls; and (3) Completes a third-party needs assessment and onboards a reputable third-party monitor.

Afghan Fund GovernanceThe Afghan Fund is based in Geneva, Switzerland, and a Board of Trustees oversees the fund. The Board currently consists of two highly qualified Afghan economic experts with relevant macroeconomic and monetary policy experience, a U.S. government representative, and a Swiss government representative. The Afghan Fund has the support of international partners committed to supporting sustainable monetary and macroeconomic stability in Afghanistan. An external auditor will monitor and audit the Afghan Fund as required by Swiss law.

Legal Basis for the Transfer of the Afghan Central Banks AssetsOn February 11, 2022, the President signed E.O. 14064 to help enable certain assets belonging to DAB held in the United States to be used to benefit the Afghan people. Subsequently, the U.S. Department of the Treasurys Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) issued a license authorizing the transfer of up to $3.5 billion of DAB funds for the benefit of the Afghan people.

Consistent with past practice and following the Taliban takeover, the Department of State certified two individuals pursuant to Section 25B of the Federal Reserve Act as having joint authority to receive, control, or dispose of property from the DABs account. Those individuals founded the Afghan Fund as a legal entity in Switzerland.

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The United States and Partners Announce Establishment of Fund for the People of Afghanistan - United States Department of State - Department of State

The future of Afghanistan’s youth is in peril – Business Insider

A year into the Taliban takeover, children in Afghanistan are in facing death, suffering, and an uncertain future.

With forced labor, malnutrition, and education restrictions dampening the population, Asuntha Charles, a humanitarian aid worker, told Insider that Afghan children are in urgent need of support.Since the Taliban takeover, the US and its international partners froze roughly $10 billion of the country's assets leaving the people who remain inside the country in dire need of outside aid.

"It's not the right moment for the international communities to stay away from Afghanistan, but to provide more and more support so that the future generation is not affected, but able to see life and hope," said Charles, who is from southern India.

Charles has been working with World Vision for about two years and has lived in Afghanistan for roughly 20 years. The Christian-based organization focuses on aiding children facing poverty and justice.

Since the Taliban regained control in August of last year, economic collapse, drought, and the aftermath of a substantial earthquake have devasted the region and the people who live there.

"One thing gives me real worry is about the future of both girls and boys in this country. Because the future generation is really losing lot of opportunities because of so many factors," Charles told Insider.

A study by an NGO called Save the Children found that an estimated one million childrenhad been forced into child labor by February.

"It's really going to have not only physical but psychological impact on the children who are in this country now," Charles added.

It's not uncommon for children in the Taliban-controlled region to work to survive.

After school, some children, boys mostly, are forced to sell items to make money for food or search for litter to burn for warmth.

Girls have been barred from receiving an education beyond primary school, a dramatic regression in women's rights that had been made in the region over the last 20 years.

And outside of education, the lives of Afghanistan's youth are at stake.

Hundreds of children have died while playing outside as a result of explosive weapons that remained from the war.

And, by February, roughly 5 million children were close to starvation, according toThe Guardian. And, as of August, about 90% of households in the country don't have enough food to survive, CBS News reported.

Some parents have faced the impossible decision of selling their children into marriage or at the bazaar in order to feed the rest of the family.

"That's why we really want to continue to advocate that this is not the right moment to forget the people of Afghanistan and especially the children, and the global has to stand by them, and that's very, very crucial," Charles told Insider.

She acknowledged the numerous humanitarian issues going on across the globe, but said she doesn't want the world to forget about Afghanistan.

"There are so many crises globally, so people tend to also associate with different conflicts," Charles continued, "So, that type of frustration exists among people, that they are forgotten."

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The future of Afghanistan's youth is in peril - Business Insider