Public Policy & NGOs
Here's a look at documents from public policy and non-governmental organizations
Featured Stories
World Vision International: Strait Closure Pushes Water Prices Over the Edge in Sudan
MONROVIA, California, April 3 -- World Vision International issued the following news release:
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Strait closure pushes water prices over the edge in Sudan
El Daein, East Darfur, Sudan -- Every day in Sudan's Darfur region, donkey carts loaded with large water tanks queue at pumping stations to collect a precious cargo that will be sold door-to-door across displacement camps and surrounding communities.
But as global fuel prices surge following conflict in the Gulf and the closure of the Strait of Hormuz, the cost of those donkey-cart deliveries is rising sharply -- pushing water out of
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MONROVIA, California, April 3 -- World Vision International issued the following news release:
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Strait closure pushes water prices over the edge in Sudan
El Daein, East Darfur, Sudan -- Every day in Sudan's Darfur region, donkey carts loaded with large water tanks queue at pumping stations to collect a precious cargo that will be sold door-to-door across displacement camps and surrounding communities.
But as global fuel prices surge following conflict in the Gulf and the closure of the Strait of Hormuz, the cost of those donkey-cart deliveries is rising sharply -- pushing water out ofreach for hundreds of thousands of people who have fled Sudan's conflict, says World Vision.
Sudan is heavily reliant on boreholes drilled deep into the country's aquifers. Diesel generators suck the water into tanks or piping that feeds people and livestock in a parched land, currently in its hot season. When diesel prices rise, so does the price of water, including that delivered by the ubiquitous donkey-drawn water tanks. Since the closure of the Strait and the missile attacks on Iranian and Gulf state refineries, diesel prices have rocketed at points to $17 per gallon (3.7 litres).
The problem is especially critical because Sudan is home to the world's largest displacement crisis with more than nine million people having fled to other parts of the country, in the wake of the three-year civil conflict.
One state - East Darfur - now hosts over 189,000 people who have arrived with nothing. They live in camps, mostly in and around the state capital, El Daein, placing an enormous burden on the city - population 377,000.
Mohammed Gebril, World Vision's Water and Sanitation Coordinator in East Darfur, said: "Water prices increased 30 percent after the Strait was shut. This is having a massive impact on people who can barely afford to survive. Hundreds of thousands of displaced families - most of them women and children - are getting almost no international aid and cannot afford to buy water."
A jerry can (20 litres) of water costs 500 Sudanese Pounds ( USD 0.167). Humanitarian standards state that a person in an emergency setting should get 15 litres per day, but many households of eight or nine people are surviving on just one jerry can per day.
Women who live in the camps tell World Vision they can only afford enough water to drink and prepare basic meals. They say they need more solar water pumps because there are too few.
In East Darfur, World Vision has rehabilitated 16 bore wells, and installed piping and solar panels to generate solar power to reduce the reliance on diesel generators. But hundreds of wells are needed to meet the enormous need. International funding cuts mean there is almost nothing available.
Without access to clean water, Mohammed Gebril says people are prone to drink from unsafe water sources, which leads to cholera and typhoid outbreaks. Since 2024, across Sudan there have been over 113,000 cases of cholera, killing over 3,000 people.* Those aged under five face the highest risk of death.
Diesel's journey into Darfur is long and tortuous. Shipped via the Strait of Hormuz to Kenya, it then finds its way onto trucks which cross South Sudan and then travel via unpaved roads into Sudan.
Sudan itself has plentiful supplies of both oil and water. But the oil refineries are not functioning due to conflict. Sudan has the largest fossil water aquifer in the world, covering about 29% of Sudan - Africa's third largest country - but a massive expansion of bore wells needs peace and infrastructure investment to return to Sudan.
*https://reliefweb.int/report/sudan/sudan-crisis-situation-analysis-period-090326-150326
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Original text here: https://www.wvi.org/newsroom/strait-closure-pushes-water-prices-over-edge-sudan
[Category: Sociological]
MassBio CEO Flags Potential 100% Pharma Tariffs, Looming NIH Budget Cuts
WASHINGTON, April 3 -- MassBio CEO and President Kendalle Burlin O'Connell is monitoring an expected Section 232 national security announcement from the Trump administration regarding 100% tariffs on patented drugs and ingredients. The move targets pharmaceutical companies without White House pricing agreements, raising significant supply chain and financial concerns for smaller biotech manufacturers.
-- Marlyn T. Vitin, Targeted News Service
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Here is the text of the document:
CEO Innovation Policy Update 04.02.26
Congress is in the middle of a two-week recess, leaving Washington unusually
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WASHINGTON, April 3 -- MassBio CEO and President Kendalle Burlin O'Connell is monitoring an expected Section 232 national security announcement from the Trump administration regarding 100% tariffs on patented drugs and ingredients. The move targets pharmaceutical companies without White House pricing agreements, raising significant supply chain and financial concerns for smaller biotech manufacturers.
-- Marlyn T. Vitin, Targeted News Service
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Here is the text of the document:
CEO Innovation Policy Update 04.02.26
Congress is in the middle of a two-week recess, leaving Washington unusuallyquiet from a biotech perspective, at least on the surface. The policy environment for biotech continues to move, with a significant tariff announcement expected as early as today. MassBio is using this window to prepare for continued engagement on our priorities when members return and to monitor developments coming out of the Administration. Here's what we're watching:
Section 232 Pharma Tariff Announcement Expected: Details are still emerging, but the Trump administration is expected to announce 100% tariffs on imports of patented drugs and active pharmaceutical ingredients as soon as today, targeting companies that have not entered pricing agreements with the White House. The tariffs stem from a Section 232 national security investigation and are designed to pressure holdouts into the administration's Most Favored Nation pricing initiative. While many large pharma companies have already struck deals, the implications for smaller biotech manufacturers, and for drug supply chains more broadly, remain deeply uncertain. We'll be watching closely as details emerge.
Reconciliation Momentum and Drug Pricing Codification: There is growing momentum for a reconciliation package in the coming months. MFN codification efforts remain a real risk as Republicans look for revenue offsets and to address President Trumps' repeated calls for legislation. Hearings on drug pricing are likely to pick up as reconciliation negotiations heat up. MassBio will continue making the case that pricing policies that undermine returns on innovation ultimately harm patients and the broader U.S. innovation ecosystem, not just companies.
Senate Small Business Committee Takes Bioeconomy on the Road: On April 7, the Senate Small Business Committee will hold a field hearing in Indiana titled "Fueling Innovation: The Role of Small Businesses in America's Bioeconomy." The hearing will bring together several founders, accelerator leaders, and regional innovation ecosystem builders to discuss how small biotech and life sciences companies are driving economic growth outside major hubs. While the location and witnesses may lend themselves to Midwest-specific discussions, the hearing reflects broader congressional interest in strengthening the small business innovation pipeline, so we'll be watching for anything that may impact the Massachusetts early-stage biotech community.
FY27 Budget Request Expected This Week: The White House is expected to release its fiscal year 2027 budget request this week, and early reports suggest it will again propose cuts to the National Institutes of Health. The NIH received $48.7 billion in FY26, a modest increase over the prior year and a rejection of the President's 40% proposed cut. Sen. Dave McCormick (R-PA), appearing alongside NIH Director Jay Bhattacharya in Philadelphia this week, said he would be "a strong advocate of maintaining and increasing NIH funding" and predicted that "many people in Congress will continue to support keeping NIH funding where it is or even growing." Broad bipartisan resistance is what stopped last year's cuts from becoming law, and the same dynamic is likely to play out again. Still, any reduction would represent a significant blow to the basic and translational research pipeline that Massachusetts biotech depends on. MassBio will be reviewing the full request and engaging appropriators as the FY27 process gets underway.
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This update was originally posted by MassBio CEO & President Kendalle Burlin O'Connell on LinkedIn.
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Original text here: https://www.massbio.org/news/recent-news/ceo-innovation-policy-update-04-02-26/
[Category: Biology]
Independent Women's Voice: Governor Morrisey Champions Independent Contractors by Enacting Portable Benefits Legislation
WASHINGTON, April 3 -- The Independent Women's Voice, an organization that fights for policy solutions for women, posted the following news release on April 2, 2026:
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Governor Morrisey Champions Independent Contractors by Enacting Portable Benefits Legislation
West Virginian Freelancers Poised to Have Control Over Worker Benefits Without Sacrificing Job Flexibility
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CHARLESTON, WV -- Today West Virginia Governor Patrick Morrisey signed House Bill 4009 into law, delivering on his commitment to modernize workforce policy for the state's 95,000+ independent contractors.
HB 4009, modeled
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WASHINGTON, April 3 -- The Independent Women's Voice, an organization that fights for policy solutions for women, posted the following news release on April 2, 2026:
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Governor Morrisey Champions Independent Contractors by Enacting Portable Benefits Legislation
West Virginian Freelancers Poised to Have Control Over Worker Benefits Without Sacrificing Job Flexibility
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CHARLESTON, WV -- Today West Virginia Governor Patrick Morrisey signed House Bill 4009 into law, delivering on his commitment to modernize workforce policy for the state's 95,000+ independent contractors.
HB 4009, modeledafter Independent Women's "Voluntary Portable Benefits Act," empowers independent workers to secure vital worker benefits while protecting the freedom and flexibility that define freelance work. Signed today, it is a critical piece of the Governor's Workforce Readiness and Opportunity Act and his 2026 legislative priorities.
Crucially, the legislation explicitly protects independent contractor classification under wage, unemployment insurance, workers' compensation, and other employment related laws, eliminating legal barriers that previously discouraged companies from offering benefits to independent workers.
West Virginia is now the fifth state to enact portable benefits legislation, thanks to Governor Morrisey's leadership in supporting innovative solutions for the modern economy and expanding worker freedom as one of the earliest adopters of Independent Women's portable benefits model.
Morrisey is the first governor in the country to announce portable benefits as a key priority during his State of the State Address to kick off West Virginia's legislative session.
Governor Patrick Morrisey said, "West Virginia continues to lead with innovative policies to modernize our workforce and strengthen our economy, which is why I was proud to see my Workforce Readiness and Opportunity initiatives pass the Legislature. I also want to thank the team at Independent Women for their advocacy on voluntary portable benefits, a reform that protects our growing independent workforce and provides a pathway for these hardworking individuals to access benefits similar to those offered in traditional employment. These efforts will help more West Virginians find opportunity, build careers, and succeed in today's economy."
Now signed into law, the bill creates a voluntary framework allowing West Virginia's independent workers to establish portable benefit plans while ensuring those benefits remain fully owned and controlled by the worker.
Benefits for independent workers include:
* retirement savings
* health insurance
* disability coverage
* life insurance
"Governor Morrisey's recognition of flexibility and freedom being important to women is just one of the many reasons West Virginia continues to lead in innovative economic growth solutions." said Patrice Onwuka, director of Independent Women's Center for Economic Opportunity and author of this model legislation. "Many women choose to work independently rather than in a traditional 9-to-5 job. Through the 'Voluntary Portable Benefits Act,' West Virginia will build greater security for independent contractors, which is a win for women. Governor Morrisey, and the full West Virginia legislature, are true champions for the people of West Virginia for enacting this important legislation."
West Virginia, home to 605 members of Independent Women's Network, joins Alabama, Tennessee, Utah, and Wyoming in enacting Voluntary Portable Benefits and strengthening economic opportunity for independent workers.
Direct media inquiries and booking requests to press@iwvoice.com.
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Original text here: https://www.iwvoice.com/2026/04/governor-morrisey-champions-independent-contractors-by-enacting-portable-benefits-legislation/
[Category: Sociological]
Democracy Forward: Appeals Court Rejects Latest Trump-Vance Administration Attack on Funding for Solutions to Homelessness
WASHINGTON, April 3 -- Democracy Forward, an organization that says it advances democracy and social progress through litigation, policy and public education and regulatory engagement, issued the following news release on April 1, 2026:
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Appeals Court Rejects Latest Trump-Vance Administration Attack on Funding for Solutions to Homelessness
Court Continues to Block Unlawful Grant Restrictions that Would Push Nearly 200,000 Americans into Homelessness
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Boston - The First Circuit Court of Appeals has rejected a Trump-Vance administration request to overturn a court order that is blocking
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WASHINGTON, April 3 -- Democracy Forward, an organization that says it advances democracy and social progress through litigation, policy and public education and regulatory engagement, issued the following news release on April 1, 2026:
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Appeals Court Rejects Latest Trump-Vance Administration Attack on Funding for Solutions to Homelessness
Court Continues to Block Unlawful Grant Restrictions that Would Push Nearly 200,000 Americans into Homelessness
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Boston - The First Circuit Court of Appeals has rejected a Trump-Vance administration request to overturn a court order that is blockingthe administration's attempts to implement unlawful and unreasonable restrictions that seek to shift funding away from proven solutions to homelessness.
For years and through multiple presidential administrations, the Department of Housing and Urban Development's (HUD) Continuum of Care (CoC) Program has helped provide the necessary resources for local governments and organizations to fund permanent housing projects for veterans, seniors, people with disabilities, and individuals and families with children experiencing homelessness. On November 13, 2025, however, without explanation, HUD rescinded the two-year notice of funding opportunity (NOFO) that should have governed FY 2025 awards and replaced it with one that threatens existing services, which could push nearly 200,000 Americans into homelessness. It then issued yet another new NOFO a month later. The new NOFO for FY 2025 upended the stability of the program required by law, and would have a devastating impact for communities, unhoused and previously unhoused children, youth, adults, and families, and the service providers who rely on federal funding to provide needed help.
A broad coalition of local governments and nonprofit organizations took legal action to stop the new NOFO in National Alliance to End Homelessness et al. v. HUD, and in December 2025, a federal judge granted preliminary relief, which temporarily blocks the administration's attempts to implement the unlawful and unreasonable restrictions that seek to shift funding away from proven solutions to homelessness. Today's decision maintains that block and confirms that Congress's recent law requiring HUD to renew existing grants does not mean that HUD may implement the unlawful conditions.
The coalition behind the lawsuit includes the National Alliance to End Homelessness (NAEH), the National Low Income Housing Coalition (NLIHC), Crossroads Rhode Island, Youth Pride, Inc., as well as the County of Santa Clara, Calif., San Francisco, Calif., King County, Wash., Boston, Mass., Cambridge, Mass., Nashville, Tenn., and Tucson, Ariz.
The coalition released the following statement in response to the order:
"As the Trump-Vance administration continues to weaponize federal funding and attempts to hold hostage support for people experiencing homelessness - including families, seniors, veterans, and people with disabilities - we are relieved that the appeals court has left the order we earned late last year in place. We will continue to pursue this case and remain dedicated to protecting proven solutions to homelessness and the hundreds of thousands of people who rely on this vital support."
Democracy Forward and the ACLU Foundation of Rhode Island represent the coalition of nonprofit organizations in the matter; the National Homelessness Law Center represents NAEH and NLIHC; Public Rights Project represents the cities of Boston, Cambridge, Nashville, and Tucson as well as King County; Santa Clara County and San Francisco are also plaintiffs. The Lawyers' Committee for Rhode Island represents all plaintiffs.
Plaintiff and co-counsel quotes regarding the original filing are available here (https://democracyforward.org/updates/statements-local-governments-and-nonprofit-groups-challenge-unlawful-new-trump-vance-administration-restrictions-that-threaten-proven-solutions-to-homelessness/).
Read the court's order here (https://democracyforward.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/04/2026.4.1-Order-denying-stay.pdf).
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Original text here: https://democracyforward.org/news/press-releases/appeals-court-rejects-latest-trump-vance-administration-attack-on-funding-for-solutions-to-homelessness/
[Category: Political]
CAIR-NY Calls for Independent Criminal Probe of 'Homicide' of Rohingya Refugee Abandoned by Border Patrol
WASHINGTON, April 3 -- The Council on American-Islamic Relations posted the following news release on April 2, 2026:
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CAIR-NY Calls for Independent Criminal Probe of 'Homicide' of Rohingya Refugee Abandoned by Border Patrol
The New York chapter of the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR-NY), a chapter of the nation's largest Muslim civil rights and advocacy organization, today called for an independent criminal investigation of the "homicide" of a nearly-blind Rohingya refugee in Buffalo, New York, after border patrol agents abandoned him miles away from his home.
Last month, CAIR
... Show Full Article
WASHINGTON, April 3 -- The Council on American-Islamic Relations posted the following news release on April 2, 2026:
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CAIR-NY Calls for Independent Criminal Probe of 'Homicide' of Rohingya Refugee Abandoned by Border Patrol
The New York chapter of the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR-NY), a chapter of the nation's largest Muslim civil rights and advocacy organization, today called for an independent criminal investigation of the "homicide" of a nearly-blind Rohingya refugee in Buffalo, New York, after border patrol agents abandoned him miles away from his home.
Last month, CAIRand CAIR-NY called for the New York State Police to work with the Buffalo Police Department to thoroughly and transparently investigate the disappearance and subsequent death of Nurul Amin Shah Alam.
The Erie County Medical Examiner's Office has now ruled his death a "homicide."
In a statement, CAIR-NY Executive Director Afaf Nasher, Esq., said:
"The Erie County Medical Examiner's ruling that the death of Nurul Amin Shah Alam was a homicide confirms what his family and community feared from the beginning: this was not a tragic accident, but a preventable and deeply disturbing loss of life.
"We call for an immediate, independent criminal investigation into the actions of the U.S. Border Patrol agents who abandoned a nearly-blind refugee miles away from his home in freezing conditions. No one, regardless of immigration status, should ever be treated with such disregard for their safety and basic human dignity."
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Original text here: https://www.cair.com/press_releases/cair-ny-calls-call-for-independent-criminal-probe-of-homicide-of-rohingya-refugee-abandoned-by-border-patrol/
[Category: Sociological]
CAIR Md. Condemns Alleged Anti-Palestinian, Anti-Muslim Incident, Calls on MCPS to Take Action Pending Probe
WASHINGTON, April 3 -- The Council on American-Islamic Relations posted the following news release on April 2, 2026:
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CAIR Md. Condemns Alleged Anti-Palestinian, Anti-Muslim Incident, Calls on MCPS to Take Action Pending Probe
The Maryland office of the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR), the nation's largest Muslim civil rights and advocacy organization, today strongly condemned alleged discriminatory conduct by a Montgomery County Public Schools (MCPS) teacher against a Muslim Palestinian student, and called on the school system to immediately remove her from all student contact
... Show Full Article
WASHINGTON, April 3 -- The Council on American-Islamic Relations posted the following news release on April 2, 2026:
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CAIR Md. Condemns Alleged Anti-Palestinian, Anti-Muslim Incident, Calls on MCPS to Take Action Pending Probe
The Maryland office of the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR), the nation's largest Muslim civil rights and advocacy organization, today strongly condemned alleged discriminatory conduct by a Montgomery County Public Schools (MCPS) teacher against a Muslim Palestinian student, and called on the school system to immediately remove her from all student contactpending the outcome of an investigation into the troubling allegations.
According to a complaint received by CAIR and eyewitness accounts, on March 3, 2026, a teacher at John T. Baker Middle School reportedly directed inflammatory, offensive and deeply inappropriate remarks at a 14-year-old Palestinian Muslim student during a routine classroom interaction, including asking whether the student was going to "blow [her] up," invoking harmful stereotypes tied to global violence and terrorism.
CAIR denounces the reported remarks as egregious, dehumanizing, and rooted in dangerous Islamophobic and anti-Palestinian tropes.
READ CAIR'S LETTER (https://www.cair.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/04/Ms.-Jessika-Boone-MCPS.pdf).
"This type of conduct is inconsistent with professional standards and reflects a troubling stereotype that targets a child based on their identity," said CAIR's Maryland Director Zainab Chaudry. "This incident has taken a significant mental and emotional toll on this student and family, and led to several missed days from school. Educators are in positions of authority, and have a responsibility to ensure safe, non-biased learning environments. No student should be profiled, dehumanized, or criminalized especially in a school setting. Until this matter is resolved, CAIR is seeking basic, common-sense measures by the school system to protect the safety and well-being of this child and other students."
CAIR confirmed that MCPS has reopened its investigation into the incident following a March 31 meeting involving district leadership, the student's family, school administrator, and CAIR. However, the organization stressed that an ongoing investigation alone is not sufficient to protect students, and that immediate, non-punitive administrative action is a necessary safeguard.
Following discussions with the family, CAIR today formally called on MCPS to:
1. Immediately remove the teacher from all direct student access pending the outcome of the investigation;
2. Conduct a prompt, thorough, and impartial investigation into the allegations;
3. Provide written confirmation of interim safety measures and a clear timeline for resolution.
News of this incident has spread beyond the class and has raised concerns about the short and long-term impact of such alleged conduct on students navigating identity, belonging, and safety within public schools in today's tense political climate.
This is one of a several anti-Palestinian and/or anti-Muslim incidents reported within the school system this year.
Last week, CAIR called on called on Olney Elementary School (OES) to provide clarification and transparency regarding concerns raised by a recent school communication about its "Culture Night" event.
SEE: CAIR Md. Seeks Clarity from Olney Elementary School Following 'Culture Night' Controversy, Citing Concerns of Anti-Palestinian Bias in Schools (https://www.cair.com/press_releases/cair-md-seeks-clarity-from-olney-elementary-school-following-culture-night-controversy-citing-concerns-of-anti-palestinian-bias-in-schools/)
Earlier this year, violent Islamophobic and anti-Palestinian graffiti was discovered spray painted on the exterior wall of MCPS' Walt Whitman High School.
SEE: CAIR Maryland, Muslim Council Condemn Islamophobic and Violent Hate Graffiti at Walt Whitman High School (https://www.cair.com/press_releases/cair-maryland-muslim-council-condemn-islamophobic-and-violent-hate-graffiti-at-walt-whitman-high-school/)
The civil rights organization has also provided advocacy support in several other complaints.
Federal and state civil rights laws prohibit discrimination based on religion and national origin, and schools have a legal and moral obligation to uphold these protections.
"This is about more than one incident. It is about whether Muslim and Palestinian students can walk into their classrooms without fear of being targeted or stereotyped," added Chaudry. "MCPS has the opportunity to act decisively to demonstrate that they are committed to the well-being of all their students."
CAIR's mission is to protect civil rights, enhance understanding of Islam, promote justice, and empower American Muslims.
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Original text here: https://www.cair.com/press_releases/cair-md-condemns-alleged-anti-palestinian-anti-muslim-incident-calls-on-mcps-to-take-action-pending-probe/
[Category: Sociological]
CAIR Joins Muslim Community, Civil Rights Groups' Call for Release of Milwaukee Muslim Community Leader Detained by ICE
WASHINGTON, April 3 -- The Council on American-Islamic Relations posted the following news release on April 2, 2026:
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CAIR Joins Muslim Community, Civil Rights Groups' Call for Release of Milwaukee Muslim Community Leader Detained by ICE
The Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR), the nation's largest Muslim civil rights and advocacy organization, today joined a coalition of Muslim community and civil rights organizations to call for the immediate release of Salah Sarsour, a Palestinian-American Muslim community leader from Milwaukee currently being detained by ICE.
Sarsour, who
... Show Full Article
WASHINGTON, April 3 -- The Council on American-Islamic Relations posted the following news release on April 2, 2026:
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CAIR Joins Muslim Community, Civil Rights Groups' Call for Release of Milwaukee Muslim Community Leader Detained by ICE
The Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR), the nation's largest Muslim civil rights and advocacy organization, today joined a coalition of Muslim community and civil rights organizations to call for the immediate release of Salah Sarsour, a Palestinian-American Muslim community leader from Milwaukee currently being detained by ICE.
Sarsour, whohas lived in the United States legally for 32 years and serves as the president of the Islamic Society of Milwaukee, was abducted by ICE on Monday. He was pulled over while driving by over 10 ICE agents with no cause. He was taken out of state to a detention facility in Chicago before being transferred to a detention center in Indiana. His family was left scrambling to determine his whereabouts and his condition.
In a joint letter, CAIR and partners called on community members to contribute to the fund to advocate for Salah Sarsour and to share their stories or a memory of Sarsour and use the hashtag #FreeSalahSarsour
SEE: President of Islamic Society of Milwaukee detained by ICE, according to organization - WPR (https://www.wpr.org/news/president-islamic-society-of-milwaukee-salah-sarsour-detained-ice)
SEE ALSO:Islamic Society of Milwaukee president Salah Sarsour detained by ICE (https://www.jsonline.com/story/news/local/milwaukee/2026/04/02/islamic-society-of-milwaukee-president-salah-sarsour-detained-by-ice/89433525007/)
In a statement, CAIR National Executive Director Nihad Awad said:
"The abduction of Mr. Sarsour, a beloved leader of Milwaukee's Muslim community, is utterly unjust and cruel. Once again, the administration is targeting a Palestinian-American for having the courage to be a leader and to stand against injustice. We call for his immediate release and return to his family."
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Original text here: https://www.cair.com/press_releases/cair-joins-muslim-community-civil-rights-groups-call-for-release-of-milwaukee-muslim-community-leader-detained-by-ice/
[Category: Sociological]