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Estados Unidos detuvo a dos ciudadanos chinos acusados de agroterrorismo: ingresaron al país con un peligroso hongo

La Fiscalía Federal del Distrito Este de Michigan, Estados Unidos detuvo este martes a dos ciudadanos chinos acusados de participar de una trama de posible agroterrorismo, tras haber ingresado al país con un peligroso hongo.
En un comunicado, el fiscal federal Jerome F. Gorgon Jr. apuntó que Yunqing Jian, de 33 años, y Zunyoung Liu, de 34, habían sido arrestados y formalmente acusados de conspiración, contrabando de mercancías, declaraciones falsas y fraude de visados, luego de que se corroborara su ingreso en el país con el hongo Fusarium graminearum, considerado un “arma potencial de agroterrorismo”.
Según el FBI, Jian había recibido financiación del Gobierno chino para estudiar este patógeno en su país, mientras que en sus dispositivos se encontraron también evidencias de su pertenencia y afinidad al Partido Comunista.
En tanto, su novio, Liu, también trabaja en una universidad en el gigante asiático, donde realiza investigaciones sobre el mismo hongo, y habría ingresado en Estados Unidos para continuar con sus tareas en el laboratorio de la Universidad de Michigan junto a su pareja.
Inicialmente mintió a las autoridades sobre su contrabando del Fusarium graminearum a través del Aeropuerto Metropolitano de Detroit, pero luego acabó confesando el hecho.
“Las presuntas acciones de estos ciudadanos chinos, entre los que se encuentra un miembro leal del Partido Comunista Chino, son motivo de grave preocupación para la seguridad nacional. Estos dos extranjeros han sido acusados de introducir de contrabando un hongo que ha sido descrito como un ‘arma potencial de agroterrorismo’ en el corazón de Estados Unidos, donde aparentemente pretendían utilizar un laboratorio de la Universidad de Michigan para llevar a cabo su plan”, aseguró el Fiscal General durante una rueda de prensa.

El Fusarium graminearum es un hongo nocivo que provoca la “pudrición de la espiga”, una enfermedad que afecta al trigo, la cebada, el maíz y el arroz, y es responsable de pérdidas de miles de millones de dólares cada año, en todo el mundo. Asimismo, quienes entren en contacto con él y sus toxinas suelen presentar cuadros de vómitos, daños hepáticos y hasta defectos reproductivos.
La detención se produjo en un contexto de creciente tensión entre Estados Unidos y China en materia de seguridad y espionaje.
El pasado 3 de junio, el Departamento de Estado acusó a China de explotar sus universidades y robar información crítica para fortalecer sus capacidades militares y de inteligencia, lo que derivó en una importante revisión de visados estudiantiles y revocación de permisos de estudio de sus ciudadanos.
El secretario de Estado, Marco Rubio, sostuvo que “cuando se trata de mantener al país a salvo, Estados Unidos no tolerará la explotación por parte del PCCh de las universidades estadounidenses o el robo de propiedad intelectual o tecnologías de investigación estadounidenses para aumentar su poder militar, llevar a cabo labores de inteligencia o reprimir las voces de la oposición”.

La portavoz del Departamento de Estado, Tammy Bruce, declaró por su parte que la administración de Donald Trump seguirá adelante con su plan para suspender de manera “agresiva” los permisos de estudio ya concedidos, pese a las polémicas suscitadas.
“Todas las personas que estén aquí con un visado deben reconocer que Estados Unidos se toma muy en serio sus visados. La verificación no es un proceso único (…) Estamos revisando visados (…) Cada adjudicación de un visado es una cuestión de seguridad nacional”, insistió Bruce.
Enseguida, China condenó la decisión de la Casa Blanca y la calificó como una “acción políticamente motivada y discriminatoria (…) bajo el pretexto de ideología y seguridad nacional”.
La portavoz del Ministerio de Exteriores, Mao Ning, aseguró que la medida “socava gravemente los derechos e intereses legítimos” de los estudiantes chinos, “obstaculiza los intercambios educativos y culturales normales”, “expone la falsedad de la supuesta libertad y apertura que Estados Unidos dice defender” y “dañará aún más su imagen y credibilidad internacional”.

Al igual que China, varias instituciones académicas de prestigio se han visto alcanzadas por estas nuevas políticas.
La Universidad de Harvard, por ejemplo, quedó impedida de inscribir a estudiantes internacionales, en medio de sus cruces con la Casa Blanca por las protestas propalestina y los actos de violencia en el campus.
Asimismo, el gobierno la instó a reducir del 25% al 15% su proporción de alumnado extranjero y recortó una parte significativa de sus subsidios federales.
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«Bienvenidos al infierno, de aquí nadie sale»: testimonios aterradores de los venezolanos deportados por EE.UU. y presos en El Salvador

Deportados por los tatuajes
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For years, US-approved visas meant for abused children went to adults, criminals and gang members, DHS finds

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FIRST ON FOX: An immigration program meant to provide permanent legal status to undocumented migrant children who experience abuse or neglect was, under the Biden administration, offered mostly to illegal immigrants older than age 18, many of whom had criminal records, according to a new Department of Homeland Security (DHS) report obtained by Fox News Digital.
A Trump administration review of the special immigrant juvenile petition program found that between fiscal year 2020 and fiscal year 2024, 198,414 special immigrant juvenile petitions were approved. And in fiscal year 2024, 52% of special immigrant juvenile petitioners were over the age of 18 through a loophole that allowed classification to be offered up to age 21.
Of those petitioners, 60% were male. Massachusetts, New York, Maryland and California are hot spots, states where courts routinely approve special immigrant juvenile predicate orders for legal adults, often based solely on affidavits.
Affidavits alone, often written by the petitioner or a petitioner’s lawyer, are used to claim abandonment or neglect. Judges may sign off without hearings.
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A Trump administration review of the special immigrant juvenile petition program found that between fiscal year 2020 and fiscal year 2024, 198,414 special immigrant juvenile visas were approved. (Benjamin Lowy for Fox News Digital )
Misuse of the program didn’t just occur under Biden. Since 2013, more than 600 MS-13 gang members applied for the special immigrant juvenile visa, according to the DHS report, and more than 500 of them were approved.
The report also identified 853 known or suspected gang members who filed special immigrant juvenile petitions, most of whom were approved.
At least 120 of those petitioning for special immigrant juvenile visas since 2013 have been arrested for murder, and more than 200 of those who had their visas approved were convicted of sex offenses and required to register on the National Sex Offender Registry.
Many petitioners filed when they were older than age 18 and qualified because they were raised with one natural parent and claimed the other parent was not involved in their life, «abandonment,» or did not financially support them, «neglect,» according to the report.
More than 100 known or suspected members of the 18th Street gang, a criminal group with origins in California and Mexico, had special immigrant juvenile petitions approved since 2013, and dozens of others suspected of involvement in the Tren de Aragua, Sureño and Norteño gangs had approved special immigrant juvenile visas, according to the report.
The Northern Triangle countries of El Salvador, Guatemala and Honduras accounted for approximately 73.6% of all filings within the special immigrant juvenile program from 2014 to 2024.
In 2024, U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services received a petition from a 19-year-old suspected of plotting an Islamic State terror attack in the U.S. after he requested another adult be appointed his legal guardian.
But the new report found that U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services decided against interviewing or requiring biometrics for those under the age of 18. Even for those 18 and older, only 36% were asked to submit biometrics.

An Ecuadorian migrant child walks through the river Nov. 20, 2022, in Darién Gap, Colombia. (Jan Sochor/Getty Images)
Since fiscal year 2013, nearly 20,000 special immigrant juvenile petitioners submitted conflicting birth dates, with 18,407 appearing over the age of 21 based on prior records — the program age cutoff.
Fraud may be widespread in countries with weak documentation systems, like Bangladesh, Somalia and Yemen, where birth certificates are easily falsified, the report said.
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«Criminal aliens are infiltrating the U.S. through a program meant to protect abused, neglected or abandoned alien children,» said U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services spokesman Matthew J. Tragesser. «This report exposes how the open border lobby and activist judges are exploiting loopholes in the name of aiding helpless children.»

More than 600 MS-13 gang members applied for the SIJ visa, according to the DHS report, and over 500 of them were approved. (John Alle/Santa Monica Coalition)
In June, the Citizenship and Immigration Services office stopped offering deferred immigration enforcement for special immigrant juveniles. The office said it is looking at new ways to «ensure the SIJ classification remains available for the juveniles it was intended to protect.»
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Congress first established the program in 1990 to allow young unlawful immigrants that a court has determined cannot reunify with parents due to abuse or neglect to apply for special immigrant juvenile classification, lawful permanent resident status and have an eventual path to U.S. citizenship. But, by law, there are no criminal bars or good moral character requirements for special immigrant juvenile petition approval.
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Battle over the Black Sea: Russia, Ukraine strike top resort cities

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Russia and Ukraine took aim at corresponding Black Sea resort cities early Thursday morning, just hours after ceasefire talks in Turkey once again failed to deliver results.
The major Russian resort city of Sochi was rocked by a Ukrainian drone strike that began around 1 a.m. and lasted until 3 a.m., where one person was reportedly killed and another injured, according to Ukrainian media outlet the Kyiv Independent, though the Ukrainian military has not commented on the incident.
An oil depot in the Krasnodar Krai region where Sochi is located was also struck, though the extent of the damage remains unclear.
Russia’s President Vladimir Putin chairs a meeting via a video conference at the Kremlin in Moscow on July 23, 2025. (Mikhail Metzel/Pool/AFP via Getty Images)
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Kyiv has routinely levied strikes at Russian territory as Moscow continues to pummel not only the eastern frontlines of Ukraine, but civilian populations across the country.
What Ukraine may have been targeting in Sochi remains unclear, though the city is home to some of Russia’s most favored vacation locations as well as the infamous Soviet-era palace used by the Kremlin leaders as a retreat, and allegedly housed Russian President Vladimir Putin during the COVID pandemic – though it was reportedly demolished in 2024 over Ukrainian strike concerns.
Russia also hit the Ukrainian port city of Odessa – which has been repeatedly targeted in the three-year-long war – in early morning strikes in what Ukraine’s State Emergency Service described as «another hellish night» as a nine-story residential building was struck.
«The residents from the 5th to the 8th floors lost their homes,» the emergency management body said in a statement posted to Telegram. «There is a risk of structural collapse.»
Emergency rescue teams evacuated 38 people, including five who were trapped in their apartments.
At least four people were injured in the overnight strikes, according to Reuters, and fires were reported to have raged in other parts of the city as well.

Russia launched a terrifying assault on the Ukrainian Black Sea city Odessa, hitting a nine-floor residential building and destroying the iconic Privoz Market, which has existed since 1827, on July 24, 2025. (East2West via Ukraine Ministry of Defense)
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«Overnight, russian forces launched a massive attack on Odesa. As a result of an attack, one of the city’s most iconic landmarks, the Pryvoz market, caught fire,» Ukraine’s Ministry of Defense said in a post on X. «Also, multiple civilian targets were damaged, including the residential high-rise, a two-story building, a gas station, and even a UNESCO-protected architectural monument in the city center.
«Once again, Russians target civilian cities – there is zero military gain from these strikes,» the ministry added. «Ukraine needs more air defense systems to protect our people from such terror.»
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy also said on Thursday that «dozens» of civilians in Kharkiv, including children, were injured in an overnight attack by Russian glide bombs.
«These are utterly senseless strikes with no military purpose whatsoever,» Zelenskyy said. «And we see that this is Russia’s only intention – to continue aggression and killings.
«That is precisely why we need support in defense – strong air defenses, expanded weapons production. All of this will help save lives,» he added.
While Ukraine’s Defense Minister Denys Shmyhal met with NATO officials this week to discuss ramping up defensive aid and counter capabilities, attempted ceasefire talks in Istanbul between delegations from Moscow and Kyiv again failed to achieve any results, though future POW swaps were again discussed.
Zelenskyy took to X to voice his frustration at the continued Russian attacks despite Ukrainian efforts to secure a ceasefire, and said, «Yesterday, at the meeting in Istanbul, the proposal for an immediate and full ceasefire was reiterated to the Russian side.»
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Vladimir Medinskiy, advisor to President Vladimir Putin, speaks to the press at the Ciragan Palace following the third round of peace talks hosted by Turkey in Istanbul on July 23, 2025. (Abdulhamid Hosbas/Anadolu via Getty Images)
«In response, Russian drones struck residential buildings and the Pryvoz market in Odesa, apartment blocks in Cherkasy, energy infrastructure in the Kharkiv region, a university gym in Zaporizhzhia. Donetsk, Sumy, and Mykolaiv regions were all under strikes as well,» he added. «In total, there were 103 attack drones, mostly ‘Shaheds’, and four missiles.»
President Donald Trump last week gave Putin 50 days to enter into a ceasefire or face stiff sanctions, though some have expressed concern that the threat of sanctions will not be enough to deter his war ambitions.
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