An Irish man detained by ICE in the United States for five months has described his experience as "like a modern-day concentration camp," according to Sky News. Seamus Culleton, who has lived in the US for nearly 20 years and is married to a US citizen, is hoping Irish premier Micheal Martin will raise his case with US President Donald Trump during their meeting at the White House in March, Sky News reported. Culleton stated, "I don't know how much more I can take," calling the situation "torture."
The news comes as the Trump administration's EPA administrator, Lee Zeldin, is reportedly seeking to repeal the 2009 endangerment finding that established the legal basis for federal regulation of six greenhouse gases, including carbon dioxide and methane, TechCrunch reported. This move, which could happen as early as this week, is expected to attract lawsuits and could take years to resolve. The EPA's actions will initially affect tailpipe emissions for cars and trucks, but the administration is expected to use it to unwind regulations in other sectors, according to TechCrunch.
Meanwhile, Telegram users in Russia may be experiencing service disruptions after the country's communications regulator began cracking down on apps like Telegram and WhatsApp while rolling out a state-backed alternative, Max, The Verge reported. This crackdown began on Tuesday.
In other news, a mobile swimming pool lorry has been traveling across rural areas of the Moselle department in northeastern France for over a year, bringing swimming lessons to schoolchildren where access to public pools is limited, Euronews reported. The initiative aims to address difficulties faced by schools in communes with distant or unavailable municipal pools.
Finally, a body that advises US judges revised a document it created to help judges grapple with scientific issues after Republican state attorneys general complained about the chapter on climate change, Ars Technica reported. The Federal Judicial Center deleted the entire chapter in response to the complaints, which included the criticism that the document treated human influence on climate as a fact.
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