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A federal judge barred the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) from carrying out warrantless immigration arrests in Oregon, according to Fox News. U.S. District Judge Mustafa Kasubhai granted a preliminary injunction in a proposed class-action lawsuit against DHS, finding that federal agents likely violated the law through a pattern of unlawful arrests without individualized assessments of flight risk.
In other international news, Chinese leader Xi Jinping told U.S. President Donald Trump to be "prudent" when supplying weapons to Taiwan, the BBC reported. During a phone call on Wednesday, Xi described Taiwan as "the most important issue" in China-US relations. He conveyed that he attached "great importance" to ties with Washington and hoped both sides would find ways to resolve their differences. Trump described the call as "excellent" and "long and thorough," according to Reuters. The call followed a series of visits by Western leaders, including UK Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer, to China in recent months.
Meanwhile, in Australia, police identified a suspect in the disappearance of four-year-old Gus Lamont, who went missing in the South Australian outback on September 27, according to the BBC. Gus was last seen playing outside his home on a remote sheep station near Yunta, about 300km (186 miles) from Adelaide. Police stated that a person who lives on the property has been identified as a suspect but confirmed the boy's parents were not suspects. The boy's grandmother had left him alone for about half an hour before discovering him missing, prompting a large-scale land and air search.
In Eastern Europe, a war widow in Ukraine moved her husband's grave from their hometown of Slovyansk to Kyiv, fearing Russian occupation, the BBC reported. Natalia reburied her husband, Vitaly, who was killed three years ago fighting in the eastern Donbas. With Russian forces advancing and the area increasingly under attack, Natalia had Vitaly's remains exhumed and moved hundreds of miles to the capital. The reburial included a trumpet salute and rifle fire at a Kyiv cemetery.
Separately, the BBC reported that unredacted images and videos showing nudity released in the Epstein files had been online for days, despite warnings to U.S. officials about failures in redaction. Lawyers said this caused victims "irreparable" harm. The files seen by BBC Verify are among thousands of documents that lawyers say contain identifying information about dozens of Epstein's victims. A New York judge said the Department of Justice (DoJ) had agreed to quickly fix the issue after victims groups spoke out about the issue at the weekend when the New York Times reported nearly 40 separate images had been published as part of the Epstein files on Friday.
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