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The threat of deportation to Rwanda is causing migrants to head for Ireland instead of the UK, Ireland’s deputy prime minister has said.

The Rwanda Bill, which will see asylum seekers “entering the UK illegally” sent to the central African nation – regardless of the outcome of their application – was passed on Tuesday, despite human rights concerns.

Micheal Martin told The Daily Telegraph that the policy was already affecting Ireland, as people were “fearful” of staying in the UK.

The former Taoiseach said: “Maybe that’s the impact it was designed to have.”

Mr Martin, who is also Ireland’s foreign secretary, said asylum seekers were seeking “to get sanctuary here and within the European Union as opposed to the potential of being deported to Rwanda”.

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His words follow those of justice minister Helen McEntee, who told a scrutiny committee in the Irish parliament earlier this week that migrants and refugees were crossing the border with Northern Ireland.

Ms McEntee said “higher than 80%” of people seeking asylum in Ireland entered the country through Northern Ireland, a border crossing that is open as guaranteed under a UK-EU Brexit treaty.

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It comes amid increasing tension over immigration levels in Ireland, which is grappling with a housing crisis that has affected its own people as well as asylum seekers.

Overnight, six people were arrested during a protest at a site earmarked to house asylum seekers in Newtownmountkennedy in Co Wicklow.

Gardai said officers came under attack after workers were brought onto the site, suffering “verbal and physical abuse throughout the day, which escalated into rocks and other missiles being thrown this evening”.

Fires were lit, an axe was found and officers were “forced to defend themselves” with incapacitant spray, helmets and shields.

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Three patrol cars were also damaged.

Irish broadcaster RTE said protesters accused gardaí of using unnecessary force, and intimidating and aggressive tactics against a legitimate and peaceful protest.

According to RTE, there have been protests during the past six weeks at the site, known as Trudder House or River Lodge.

It is reportedly being considered as a site for 20 eight-person tents housing asylum seekers but some locals have said it is unsuitable and the village’s resources are already over-stretched.

Ms McEntee said there was “a lot of misinformation about migration at the moment”.

She tweeted late on Thursday to promote the EU Migration and Asylum Pact, which she described as “a real game changer” and “something we must opt into”.

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Australian brothers and US tourist who went missing on surfing trip in Mexico ‘shot dead by thieves’

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Australian brothers and US tourist who went missing on surfing trip in Mexico 'shot dead by thieves'

Two Australian brothers and a US tourist who went missing in Mexico were shot dead by thieves who wanted their truck’s tyres, according to prosecutors.

Relatives of Jake and Callum Robinson and Jack Carter Rhoad have identified the three bodies.

They were dumped in a remote 15m-deep (50ft) well.

 American Jack Carter Rhoad has also been missing since last weekend.
Image:
American Jack Carter Rhoad was travelling with the brothers

The trio went missing a week ago while on a surfing trip near the northern city of Ensenada – not far from the US border – and had posted photos on social media of isolated beaches.

Thieves likely saw their truck and tents and wanted their tyres but the men probably resisted, said prosecutor María Elena Andrade Ramírez.

She said the bodies were taken to “a site that is extremely hard to get to” in Baja California state.

The well, near where their truck and tent were found on Thursday, also contained a fourth body that had been there much longer.

It took two hours to winch the bodies out, said Ms Andrade Ramírez.

She said the same thieves may also have dumped the fourth body there.

Surfers protested over what they say is the dangerous situation in Baja California state. Pic: Reuters
Image:
Surfers protested over what they say is a lack of safety in the area. Pic: Reuters

Surfers near in Ensenada threw flowers in a tribute to the men. Pic: AP
Image:
Surfers near Ensenada threw flowers into the sea in a tribute to the men. Pic: AP

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Three men are being questioned over the killings.

After the bodies were found, surfers gathered in Ensenada, the nearest city, to protest at what they say is a lack of safety in the state.

“They only wanted to surf – we demand safe beaches,” said a sign held by one woman.

Some of them later took part in a ‘paddle-out’ ceremony in remembrance of the three men, forming a circle with their boards in the sea and throwing flowers.

In a Facebook message last week, Jake and Callum’s mother said she hadn’t been in touch with them since 27 April.

The post, on 1 May, said they were meant to check into an Airbnb in the resort town of Rosarito but “did not show up”.

Australian media reported Callum had been living in the US to try to become a professional lacrosse player, while his brother had only flown out to visit him two weeks ago.

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Lithium mine being built on ‘sacred ground’ where Native Americans say they were massacred

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Lithium mine being built on 'sacred ground' where Native Americans say they were massacred

It could be a scene from centuries ago. In the Nevada desert, Native Americans are protesting over a mining project they say desecrates sacred land. 

They are riding to Sentinel Mountain, which their ancestors once used as a lookout in times gone by. Here, they say, more than 30 of their people were massacred by US cavalry in 1865.

Today, the land is at the heart of America’s electric car revolution and Joe Biden’s clean energy policy

Native American tribal members say the mine neglects their interests and offends their history.

The route of the “Prayer Horse Ride”, a journey on horseback through mining-affected communities in Northern Nevada, is designed to publicise their objections.

James Matthews Native Americans protest feature
James Matthews Native Americans protest feature

“Being the original inhabitants of the land means we have cultural ties and roots to these landscapes,” says Gary McKinney, a member of the Duck Valley Shoshone Paiute tribe.

“To me, it’s sacred ground,” says Myron Smart. His grandmother survived the massacre of 1865 as a baby. Industrialising this place, he says, offends her memory and reflects the story of Native Americans through time.

“We’re people too. We have red blood just like everybody in the United States.”

James Matthews Native Americans protest feature
Image:
Myron Smart says the land is sacred ground

James Matthews Native Americans protest feature
Image:
Myron Smart’s grandmother, who survived the 1865 massacre

However, a US judge has rejected their complaints and the project is going ahead.

The open mine, which is on public land, will source lithium to power up to a million electric vehicles a year and will create 1,800 jobs in its construction phase.

President Biden aims to make the United States a world leader in electric vehicle technology and reduce reliance for lithium supply on countries like China.

The Thacker Pass project has supporters as well as opponents.

James Matthews Native Americans protest feature
James Matthews Native Americans protest feature

Lithium Americas, the company behind the project, insists the mine is not located on a massacre site. This was supported by a judge in 2021 who ruled the evidence presented by tribes “does not definitely establish that a massacre occurred” within the proposed project area.

Tim Crowley, the company’s VP of Government and External Affairs, said in a statement to Sky News: “Lithium Americas is committed to doing this project right, which is why we have a community benefits agreement in place with the local Fort McDermitt Paiute and Shoshone Tribe that ensures benefits from Thacker Pass accrue to them.

“Concerns about cultural and environmental resources were thoroughly addressed in the BLM’s (Bureau of Land Management) approved Environmental Impact Statement, which withstood comprehensive reviews by the Federal District and Circuit Courts.”

However, members of different Nevada-based Native American tribes continue to oppose the mining project. They say their evidence of the 1865 massacre, and a separate inter-tribal conflict, is rooted in the oral history passed on from their ancestors, through generations – not collated with a court case in mind, but compelling nonetheless.

“Back in our ancestors’ days, they didn’t write any documentation down, they didn’t send letters, they didn’t write in journals,” says Gary. “So there was no way that the United States government could know our story.

“These stories have been passed down generation to generation, so we have direct lineage from survivors of these massacres, which is how these stories remain in our families.”

James Matthews Native Americans protest feature
James Matthews Native Americans protest feature

The courts have also rejected complaints by tribal members and conservationists on the environmental impact and planning consultation.

The project throws a focus onto the issues surrounding the pursuit of clean energy.

“First off, we have to acknowledge that we need electric vehicles,” says Amanda Hurowitz of Mighty Earth, a global environmental non-governmental organisation.

They are more efficient than petrol and diesel cars, she says, and they are needed for the US to hit its climate targets.

But they also need more mined minerals – like lithium – and getting those materials out of the ground has an impact.

“All mining operations need to get consent from the local people,” she adds, “and the more consent, the better.”

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Kristi Noem: Joe Biden’s dog Commander ‘should be put down’, opponent who shot and killed her own dog suggests

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Kristi Noem: Joe Biden's dog Commander 'should be put down', opponent who shot and killed her own dog suggests

Joe Biden’s dog – which has bitten US Secret Service staff several times – should be put down, a political opponent, who wrote about shooting her own dog, has suggested.

Kristi Noem, the South Dakota governor, who is being vetted as a candidate for Donald Trump’s vice president in November’s election, admitted shooting and killing Cricket, a 14-month-old wirehaired pointer, more than 20 years ago.

In her memoir, due to be published this week, the Republican reportedly details how she killed the “extremely dangerous” puppy after the animal attacked and killed a neighbouring family’s chickens.

Kristi Noem has defended her decision to shoot her puppy dead.
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Kristi Noem has defended her decision to shoot her puppy dead. Pic: AP

President Joe Biden's dog Commander, a German shepherd, is walked outside the West Wing of the White House in Washington, Saturday, April 29, 2023. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)
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Commander is walked outside the West Wing. File pic: AP

In an interview on Sunday, she suggested the US president‘s German shepherd, Commander, should meet the same fate.

She told CBS News’ Face The Nation: “Joe Biden’s dog has attacked 24 Secret Service people. So how many people is enough people to be attacked and dangerously hurt before you make a decision on a dog and what to do with it?”

When asked by host Margaret Brennan, who pointed out the animal no longer lived at the White house, whether she was suggesting the dog should be shot, Ms Noem said: “That what’s the president should be accountable to.”

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In her book, Noem reportedly describes Cricket as “less than worthless” and “untrainable”.

After having shot her dog, she reportedly killed her family’s goat, which she called “nasty and mean”, The Guardian, which had an early copy of the book, reported.

The governor, who has often defended her actions, despite widespread criticism, again justified her decision in Sunday’s interview, saying: “I made a difficult choice. I think you’re a mother, too. And you have little kiddos.

“Would you make a choice between your children or a dangerous animal? And I think I would ask everybody in the country to put themselves in that situation.”

Commander is no longer on the White House campus
Image:
Commander is no longer on the White House campus. Pic: AP

Asked why she did not take the dog to a shelter instead of killing it, she said Cricket was “a working dog” who “had come from a family that had already had issues with this dog”.

“I didn’t ask somebody else to take that responsibility for me… I had to make that decision myself,” she added.

Kristi Noem shot dead a wirehair pointer dog. File pic
Image:
Kristi Noem shot dead a wirehair pointer dog. File pic

Mr Biden has not commented.

Sky News reported the US president’s German shepherd was removed from the White House last October after he bit a female officer, resulting in her needing medical treatment.

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Kristi Noem and Donald Trump embrace at a campaign rally in South Dakota. Pic: AP
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Kristi Noem is Donald Trump’s potential running mate. Pic: AP

Commander bit staff at least 10 times in one four-month period, according to Department of Homeland Security records.

Mr Biden’s previous pet, another German shepherd named Major, was sent to live with friends in Delaware after some biting incidents of his own.

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