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Amnesty: Hamas forces beating and threatening peaceful protesters in Gaza

Amnesty International (AI) reported on Wednesday that Hamas’s internal security forces have harassed, intimidated, and beaten civilians in the Gaza Strip for participating in peaceful protests.

According to the organization, the incidents took place over the past two months, as Gazans took to the streets to protest not only against what they described as “Israel’s genocide” and the escalating bombings, but also against Hamas itself, which governs the enclave.

“These protests have attracted hundreds, if not thousands, of Palestinians. Demonstrators chanted slogans and carried banners criticizing the Hamas-led authorities in Gaza. Some even called for the end of Hamas rule,” said Amnesty. Protests were reported in locations such as Jabalia refugee camp, the Shuja’iya neighborhood in Gaza City, and Khan Younis.

Erika Guevara-Rosas, Amnesty’s Director of Research, Advocacy and Campaigns, called on Hamas authorities to “immediately end all repressive measures against Palestinians who bravely and openly express dissent against Hamas practices in Gaza.”

“Reports of beatings, threats, and interrogations are extremely alarming and constitute serious violations of the rights to freedom of expression and peaceful assembly,” she added, calling it “abhorrent and shameful” that such intimidation is being added to the atrocities already suffered by Gaza’s population.

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Amnesty said it interviewed more than a dozen individuals who had taken part in the protests. Several reported being summoned outside of official procedures, beaten with sticks, and in some cases, threatened with death.

“Security forces came in threatening and beating us, accusing us of being traitors just for protesting,” one protester told Amnesty.

Another young man recounted being hit in the neck with sticks, shouted at, and accused of collaborating with Israeli intelligence: “I lost my family in one of the worst massacres of this war—five brothers and their children were killed. It’s horrifying to be labeled a collaborator, to have your patriotism questioned, after your family has been ripped from you,” he said.

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International

Three salvadorans in Florida sentenced in $146 million construction tax fraud scheme

Three Salvadoran residents living in Orlando, Florida, were sentenced for conspiracy to commit tax fraud and wire fraud involving a scheme exceeding $146 million in the construction industry, according to the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Middle District of Florida. The sentence was handed down by federal judge Timothy J. Corrigan on Tuesday, July 29.

Eduardo Aníbal Escobar (45) was sentenced to 4 years and 9 months in prison, Carlos Alberto Rodríguez (36) to 3 years and 4 months, and Adelmy Tejada (57) to 18 months in prison, followed by 6 months of house arrest. All three pled guilty on April 3, 2025.

In addition to the prison terms, the court ordered restitution payments totaling $36,957,616 to the IRS for unpaid payroll taxes, and $397,895 to two insurers for workers’ compensation claims related to the scheme.

Escobar and Rodríguez are permanent legal residents originally from El Salvador, while Tejada is a naturalized U.S. citizen of Salvadoran origin.

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International

Kremlin hails preparedness after Kamchatka quakes leave no casualties

The Kremlin expressed relief that the earthquakes that struck Russia’s Kamchatka Peninsula today —the first being the strongest since 1952— resulted in no casualties, and emphasized that the region is well prepared to face such natural disasters.

“Thank God, there were no victims,” said Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov during his daily press briefing.

The presidential representative stated that “all alert systems were activated in time, and evacuations were organized for residents in areas requiring it in response to tsunami threats.”

“Overall, the seismic resilience of the buildings proved effective (…) Therefore, we can say that the technological preparedness demonstrated a high level,” Peskov added.

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International

U.S. launches ads urging undocumented migrants to self-deport via CBP Home App

The U.S. government announced Tuesday that it will begin airing television and online ads encouraging undocumented migrants to self-deport using the CBP Home app, while warning them about the risks of remaining in the country unlawfully.

“If you are an illegal alien, this runway is your future,” says Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem in one of the YouTube ads released by her department, as the screen shows a long line of people —allegedly undocumented migrants— waiting to board a plane for removal from the U.S.

To prevent such a scenario, the government urges migrants to download the CBP Home app, launched last March by the Trump administration to facilitate voluntary departure through a series of incentives that would otherwise be lost if they are arrested and deported by authorities.

“The CBP Home app gives foreign nationals the option to leave now and self-deport, so they still have the chance to return legally in the future and live the American dream,” Noem said in a statement issued by the U.S. government.

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