US judge bars government from reviewing seized Washington Post materials

The Washington Post requested that the US government stop reviewing the documents it seized from one of its reporters, and a judge granted that request.

Press freedom advocates claim that the seized materials by journalist Hannah Natanson violate her First Amendment rights and pose a threat to journalism as a whole as a result of the temporary order.

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The federal government was ordered on Wednesday to wait until a hearing could be held on February 6 before filtering through the seized materials.

According to Porter, the US Department of Justice could respond to The Washington Post’s complaint with a pause.

A federal investigation is not being conducted in Natanson. Additionally, the US has long-established regulations and laws protecting journalists’ freedom to report on sensitive matters from whistleblower sources.

However, a search warrant was executed on January 14 for Natanson’s residence by the president’s administration. She has been reporting on changes to the federal government under Trump for the past year, and 1, 169 new sources have contacted her with information.

The Justice Department argued that a search warrant was required to find out more about government contractor Aurelio Luis Perez-Lugones, who was detained on January 8 for allegedly removing classified documents.

However, the sweep of Natanson’s home resulted in the removal of her work computer, Post-issued cellphone, personal MacBook Pro, 1-terabyte hard drive, voice recorder, and Garmin watch.

Lawyers argued in court documents that Natanson’s electronics were “years of information about past and current confidential sources and unpublished newsgathering materials, including those she was using for current reporting.”

According to the complaint, “abandoned data may not even be relevant to the warrant, which only requests records from or relating to a single government contractor.”

According to the complaint, the six seized items included a lot of data about her journalism career.

More than 30 000 Post emails from the past year alone are included in Natanson’s “devices,” it claims.

The Post is scheduled to file a federal court in Virginia in response to the Justice Department’s request for the return of the materials.

The government keeps its hands on these materials every day, and the outrageous seizure of our reporter’s confidential newsgathering materials stifles speech, cripples reporting, and causes irreparable harm, the newspaper reported in a statement.

We have requested that the court prevent the use of all seized items and require their immediate return. Anything less would allow for-going newsroom searches and restore censorship to the original search warrants.

The Trump administration has come under fire for its combative approach to the media, and its critics claim that it is attempting to erode the right to free speech through legal protest.

Trump and his supporters have, however, stated that they are still working with the government to find “leakers” who leak sensitive information to the media.

Natanson was accused of “reporting classified and illegally leaked information,” according to Attorney General Pam Bondi.

In a social media post, she wrote that Perez-Lugones is currently behind bars.

The Trump administration will not tolerate classified information that is knowingly leaked, putting our country at risk for national security and the brave people who serve our country.

Karoline Leavitt, a press secretary for the White House, reiterated that statement and that the Trump administration would have the right to file a lawsuit against anyone found to be using illegal methods.

She said, “The administration is not going to tolerate leaks, especially those coming from the US government’s national security apparatus,” without going into detail.

Anyone who violates the law, whether it’s a journalist or an employee of a federal agency will face legal action.

The US Constitution’s First Amendment provides that no law can be passed that would “abolish the freedom of speech or the press.”

The Supreme Court has ruled over the years that while the government may ban the media from “clear and present danger,” it must also burden the authorities to establish that a threat exists.

In one of the cases, New York Times v. United States in 1971, The Washington Post participated.

Can Israel flatten the UNRWA headquarters with impunity?

After Israel bulldozed the UNRWA headquarters in occupied East Jerusalem, it has received international condemnation.

The UN claimed that razing the compound was against international law.

What effects will the demolition have?

Presenter: Adrian Finighan

Guests:

Shireen Salti, a political analyst with a focus on Israeli-Palestine relations, is a political analyst.

Francesca Albanese, a former lawyer at UNRWA, is the UN special rapporteur on human rights in the occupied Palestinian territory.

US begins transferring ISIL-linked detainees from Syria to Iraq

Palestinians deny reports Israel halted refugee football pitch demolition

A youth organization in the Palestinian Aida refugee camp in Bethlehem, occupied West Bank, has refuted reports that Israel has suspended plans to destroy a nearby football pitch, claiming that it has not been given any formal notice to do so.

The Aida Youth Centre’s head, Munther Amira, stated on Wednesday that no formal document had been provided to confirm reports that Israel had responded to international pressure and had suspended the demolition order.

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Reports suggested that Israel had acted in response to international football associations FIFA and UEFA, which oversee the country’s football stadium, to prevent the planned demolition of the pitch, which is near Israel’s border with Bethlehem.

Amira stated that neither the court nor the Israeli government have provided any official confirmation of this information. These remain unconfirmed media reports with no official basis for Aida camp, the youth center, and the Aida sports team.

Palestinian children and boys play football on Friday, December 26, 2025, at a pitch in the West Bank city of Bethlehem next to Israel’s separation wall.

“Save the Pitch,” please.

In an effort to stop Israel from imposing the demolition order on the refugee camp’s only sporting facility, the Aida Youth Centre launched a global campaign called “Save the Pitch” in recent weeks.

The pitch’s manager, Amira, claimed uncertainty has plagued the area since November.

After storming the camp and placing the notice on the pitch’s main gate, Israeli occupation forces issued the first demolition order against the football pitch on November 3.

According to him, the first demolition order referenced “security concerns,” claiming that the pitch posed a threat because it was close to the camp’s illegal separation wall.

Amira said, “We’ve been living on edge since we’ve had to demolish the pitch, which represents hope for more than 250 camp children and young people,” repeatedly.

He added that Israel, which holds the leasehold to the pitch and issued a second demolition order on December 31 before the refugee camp’s Popular Committee for Services petitioned an Israeli court, decided to postpone the demolition until January 18.

Amira explained that the center was given an additional seven days to carry out the demolition themselves by the Israeli army.

Amira claimed that this would not occur because they told us to either destroy the pitch ourselves or to force us to do it.

A deal with the Bethlehem Municipality, according to Saeed al-Azzha, the head of Aida’s Popular Committee for Services, allowed the use of the land to construct a football field, a theater, and a public garden. Israel prevented the construction of the garden and the pitch, according to him, but the committee constructed both the pitch and the theater.

Al-Azzha emphasized that the pitch was constructed legally on leased land held by the Armenian Church.

Palestinian youth attend a soccer practice session at a pitch next to Israel's separation wall in Aida Refugee camp, in the West Bank city of Bethlehem, Friday, Dec. 26, 2025, weeks after Israeli authorities issued a decision to demolish the field. (AP Photo/Mahmoud Illean)
Palestinian youths practice football on a field close to the Israeli-occupied separation wall [Mahmoud Illean/AP Photo]

Palestinian sport is being targeted.

The demolition order violates the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child, which Israel has ratified, and prevents hundreds of children from exercising their right to play sports and develop in a safe and healthy environment, according to the Palestinian Football Association (PFA).

The PFA claimed that the decision is a result of what it called an Israeli-style Israeli policy that targets Palestinian sports, which has resulted in the total or partial destruction of almost 300 sports facilities.

The demolition order caused deep sadness in the AOD football team from the Aida Youth Centre.

Rimas Sarhan, 18, said, “I started my sporting life and playing football on this pitch.”

“I can’t believe that Israel has chosen to destroy it,” I said. Why is it asked? What danger does this pitch present?” she stated.

Mohammed Jadou, a 10-year-old, also has issues with the choice. During a training session, he said, “I don’t understand why the Israeli army wants to destroy the pitch.” We don’t hurt anyone, they say. Where will we play if they don’t demolish it, I hope?

There is still a lingering concern that Israel will be motivated to target more sports facilities in the occupied West Bank, where it has conducted nearly daily military raids for the past three years.

Anan Shehadeh, a journalist for Palestinian sport, told Al Jazeera that Israel has long seen Palestinian sport as a vehicle for political expression and national identity, able to show the world the Palestinian story.

He recalls that Israel had threatened to destroy it before the opening of Majed Asad Stadium on April 14, 2011, which was attended by Sepp Blatter, the then-President of FIFA.

He claimed that “at the time, international and legal efforts prevented that demolition.” However, Israeli threats now cover almost every sports facility in Palestine.

Shehadeh continued, “Israel targets the Palestinian sporting spirit when it targets sport.” It aims to “push young people into dangerous environments and stop them from serving as ambassadors for their country.”

Shehadeh claimed that Israel’s genocidal war on the Strip had also devastated the Palestinian sport industry in Gaza.

He claimed that the sports infrastructure in Gaza has been almost completely destroyed over the past two years, while that in the West Bank have been heavily targeted through arrests and checkpoints.

Shehadeh cited the Palestinian national football team’s impressive recent performances as evidence that “despite all these measures, Israel has not yet abandoned sport.”

Rimas Sarhan
Rimas Sarhan, 18, is unable to comprehend why Israel wants to destroy the football field on which she practices in Aida [Monjed Jadou/Al Jazeera].

appeals to international sports organizations

Israeli athletics have been suspended since the start of the war, activities have been cut to a minimum, and there has been a significant decline in performance across many sports and national teams, according to Nader al-Jayousi, the technical director of the Palestine Olympic Committee.

According to al-Jayousi, “We are seeing growing engagement among Palestinian athletes.” Stopping sport would mean destroying hope, according to the saying, “We must preserve hope and continue it.”

He added that Palestinian authorities have reached out to international sporting organizations, providing evidence of Israeli violations of Palestinian sport in the hands of FIFA and other international organizations.

US House panel advances bill to give Congress authority on AI chip exports

Despite criticism from White House AI tsar David Sacks and a social media campaign against the legislation, the United States House of Representatives Foreign Affairs Committee overwhelmingly voted to advance a bill that would give Congress more authority over artificial intelligence chip exports.

After US President Donald Trump approved shipments of Nvidia’s potent H200 AI chips to China, Republican Representative Brian Mast of Florida, the chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, introduced the “AI Overwatch Act.”

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The legislation would allow the House Foreign Affairs Committee and the Senate Banking Committee to review and potentially halt permits issued to export advanced AI chips to China and other adversaries after passing the full house and Senate.

According to the bill, those “countries of concern” also include nations besides China, such as Venezuela, Russia, Iran, North Korea, Cuba, and Iran.

Additionally, the US Department of Commerce is required to provide lawmakers with a detailed, thorough application that demonstrates that adversarial countries’ use of the chips will not be used for military, intelligence, or surveillance operations in the US.

According to one source, a coordinated media campaign last week increased the bill’s chances of passing.

At a session on Wednesday before the committee vote, Mast stated that “these advanced chips must fall under the same oversight as any other military-related system.” The future of military conflict is the subject, according to the author.

The act will “slow China’s progress in developing AI that could rival US capabilities,” according to the tech advocacy group Americans for Responsible Innovation, which has been pushing for it for a fact sheet.

When Mast first introduced the bill late last year, Mast stated in a release that “America must win the AI arms race.”

White House retaliation

Sacks and the White House’s press office declined to respond to requests for comment.

Sacks claimed in a post from an X account called “Wall Street Mav” that the bill was being orchestrated by “Never Trumpers” and former Joe Biden staffers, undermining Trump’s authority and his America First strategy.

Dario Amodei, the CEO of Anthropic, claimed he had hired former Biden employees to raise the issue.

Sacks called it “Correct.”

The claims and the bill were not addressed by an Anthropic spokesperson. However, Amodei has been open about preventing China from receiving cutting-edge chips like the H200.

Amodei said at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, on Tuesday, that shipping these chips would be a big mistake. “I believe this is crazy,” she said. It’s similar to giving North Korea nuclear weapons.

Last week, conservative activist Laura Loomer, among others, wrote on X criticizing the bill, calling it “pro-China sabotage disguised as oversight.”

Mast and other committee members voted against the online threats before the vote.

Representative Michael McCaul, a Republican congressman from Texas, claimed that there are special interest groups that are currently raising millions of dollars with the very people who will profit from the sale of these chips and other companies that are “waging a social media campaign war” against this bill. Shame on them, I say.

At least 3,117 people killed during Iran protests, state media reports