International
Brown University Shooting: US Suspends Green Card Lottery Over Security Concerns
Brown University Shooting: US Suspends Green Card Lottery Over Security Concerns
The United States government has announced the suspension of the green card lottery programme, following revelations that the suspect behind the deadly Brown University shooting and the killing of an MIT professor entered the country through the scheme.
The decision was disclosed on Thursday by the administration of US President Donald Trump, after confirmation that the accused gunman migrated to the US under the Diversity Visa (DV1) Lottery Programme.
The suspect, Claudio Neves Valente, a 48-year-old Portuguese national, allegedly opened fire at Brown University on Saturday, killing two students and injuring nine others. Authorities said he later shot and killed MIT professor Nuno Loureiro at his home in Brookline, Massachusetts, two days after the campus attack.
US Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem said Neves Valente entered the US in 2017 through the diversity lottery immigrant visa programme and was subsequently granted a green card.
“He entered the United States through the DV1 programme and was granted permanent residency. He should never have been allowed in our country,” Noem said in a social media post.
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She added that, at President Trump’s directive, US Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) has been ordered to pause the DV1 programme to prevent further harm to Americans.
The green card lottery allows up to 55,000 immigrants annually from countries with low immigration rates to the US to obtain permanent residency.
Noem recalled that during Trump’s first term in 2017, the president sought to end the programme after a deadly New York City truck attack carried out by an ISIS-linked terrorist who also entered the country under the DV1 scheme.
At a press briefing, US Attorney Leah Foley revealed that Neves Valente studied at Brown University on an F1 student visa between 2000 and 2021 before later securing legal permanent resident status. She also disclosed that he attended the same academic programme in Portugal as the MIT professor he later killed.
Authorities said there was no immediate indication of motive for the shootings, which shocked elite academic institutions across New England.
Following a days-long manhunt, Neves Valente was found dead at a storage facility in New Hampshire, alongside two firearms. Providence Police Chief Oscar Perez confirmed the suspect died by suicide and is believed to have acted alone.
The victims at Brown University were identified as Ella Cook, vice president of the university’s Republican Party association, and Mukhammad Aziz Umurzokov, a student from Uzbekistan who aspired to become a neurosurgeon.
Brown University President Christina Paxson said six of the injured victims remain hospitalised in stable condition, while three have been discharged.
Investigators said progress in the case came after analysing financial records and surveillance footage, noting that the suspect attempted to evade detection by switching licence plates and using an untraceable phone.
The shootings have renewed criticism of campus security, with Brown University facing scrutiny after it emerged that its 1,200 security cameras were not integrated with police surveillance systems. President Trump has also criticised the institution’s security arrangements.
According to the Gun Violence Archive, the US has recorded over 300 mass shootings this year, defined as incidents in which four or more people are shot, as debates over gun control laws remain politically stalled.
“Nothing can fully bring closure to the lives shattered by this violence,” Paxson said. “But our community can now begin the process of healing and recovery.”
Brown University Shooting: US Suspends Green Card Lottery Over Security Concerns
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International
30 Nigerians on US Deportation Portal Linked to N87bn Fraud
30 Nigerians on US Deportation Portal Linked to N87bn Fraud
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International
Iran Halts Military Operation Against Israel, Warns of Stronger Response if Attacks Continue
Iran Halts Military Operation Against Israel, Warns of Stronger Response if Attacks Continue
Iran’s military command on Monday announced the suspension of its operation against Israel after the two countries exchanged missile and air strikes for the first time since an April ceasefire.
In a statement broadcast on Iranian state television, the Khatam al-Anbiya Central Headquarters said Iran had delivered what it described as a “painful response” to Israeli actions and was therefore ending its current military operations against Israel.
“Accordingly, the cessation of armed forces operations is hereby announced,” the statement said.
However, the command warned that the halt was conditional and could be reversed if Israel continued what Tehran described as acts of aggression, particularly in southern Lebanon.
“It is emphasised that should acts of aggression and hostility continue, including in southern Lebanon, much more severe and crushing measures than before will follow,” the statement added.
The announcement came after a sharp escalation in regional tensions over the weekend. Iran launched multiple waves of missiles at Israeli targets after Israel carried out strikes linked to Hezbollah positions and other targets in Lebanon. Israel responded with air strikes on sites inside Iran, marking the most serious direct exchange between the two sides since the truce that took effect in April.
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The latest flare-up raised fears that the ceasefire brokered earlier this year could collapse entirely and trigger a broader regional conflict involving Lebanon’s Hezbollah movement and other Iran-backed groups.
Meanwhile, U.S. President Donald Trump urged both sides to stop military action and preserve ongoing diplomatic efforts aimed at securing a broader peace arrangement in the region. Following the exchange of strikes, both Tehran and Jerusalem indicated that they were pausing further attacks for the time being, although neither side ruled out renewed military action if provoked.
The confrontation also rattled global energy markets, with oil prices surging amid concerns that a prolonged conflict could threaten shipping routes and energy supplies in the Middle East before retreating after Iran announced the end of its current operation.
Despite the announcement, analysts cautioned that the situation remains highly fragile, with tensions over Lebanon, regional security, and Iran’s broader dispute with Israel and its allies continuing to pose a risk of renewed hostilities.
Iran Halts Military Operation Against Israel, Warns of Stronger Response if Attacks Continue
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International
Israel Strikes Iranian Military Targets in Retaliation for Missile Attack
Israel Strikes Iranian Military Targets in Retaliation for Missile Attack
Jerusalem/Tehran – The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) launched airstrikes on military targets in western and central Iran early Monday, hours after Iran fired ballistic missiles at northern Israel in the first direct attack between the two nations since a fragile ceasefire took effect in early April.
The IDF said its aircraft struck military sites belonging to the “Iranian terror regime,” including areas near Tehran, Tabriz, and Isfahan. Iranian state media reported multiple explosions in those cities. The strikes also hit the Karun Mahshahr Petrochemical Company in Khuzestan Province, marking the first reported attack on an Iranian energy-related site since the April 8 ceasefire.
Israel’s ambassador to the United States, Yechiel Leiter, defended the strikes, stating that “no self-respecting country” would accept missile attacks on its territory. He added that Israel was targeting Iranian surface-to-surface missile launch sites and infrastructure not related to the energy sector.
Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) confirmed that Israel used air-launched ballistic missiles in the strikes and warned that if Israel expands its attacks on southern Lebanon or responds further, it will face more “crushing and regretful blows.”
The Iranian missile barrage on Sunday targeted Israel’s Ramat David Air Base in northern Israel, according to the IRGC. The attack was in response to recent Israeli strikes on Hezbollah positions in Beirut’s southern suburbs. The IDF said it intercepted the incoming projectiles, with no immediate reports of casualties or significant damage in Israel.
The IRGC claimed its forces struck two Israeli air bases—Nevatim and Tel Nof—during the operation it codenamed “Victory” (Nasr). Meanwhile, Iranian media reported that the Mahshahr special petrochemical economic zone was being evacuated following the Israeli strikes. The Tehran fire department confirmed that no urban areas in the capital had been targeted, with explosions limited to military sites. Iran temporarily closed the airspace around Tehran’s main international airport following the attacks.
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President Donald Trump reportedly urged Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to exercise restraint and avoid retaliatory action to preserve de-escalation efforts, telling Axios, “Hopefully Israel is not going to retaliate… Each of them had their fun. We don’t need another one.” However, Israel proceeded with the strikes despite the president’s appeal. Trump told the Financial Times that Netanyahu “doesn’t call the shots” and would have “no choice” but to accept a deal with Iran, signaling a widening rift between the two allies as the administration seeks to wind down the conflict.
The exchanges mark the latest breach of the fragile ceasefire arrangements that followed the wider U.S.-Israeli military campaign against Iran, which began in late February 2026. A senior U.S. official described Israel’s strikes as “relatively limited” in scope. The escalation threatens to derail sensitive talks to end the wider conflict and cast the region back into chaos. Iran has demanded a ceasefire in Lebanon before an accord can be reached with the U.S., while Hezbollah last week rejected a U.S.-brokered ceasefire between Israel and Lebanon.
No immediate casualty figures were available from the Iranian side. Both countries have issued warnings of further escalation as the situation continues to develop, with the IDF calling up reserve battalions and reinforcing fronts, including forces continuing operations in southern Lebanon.
Israel Strikes Iranian Military Targets in Retaliation for Missile Attack
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