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Democrats demand reforms to Homeland Security over immigration operations

The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) is facing the possibility it could run out of funding next week, as Democrats press for reforms to its immigration enforcement tactics.

But Republican leaders on Thursday pushed back against the Democratic proposals, rejecting them as moot.

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Senate Majority Leader John Thune, for instance, called the demands “unrealistic and unserious”.

“This is not a blank check situation where Republicans just do agree to a list of Democrat demands,” Thune said, adding that the two parties appeared to be at an impasse.

“We aren’t anywhere close to having any sort of an agreement.”

Congress needs to pass funding legislation for the DHS by February 13, or else its programmes could be temporarily shuttered.

Anti-ICE protesters
Demonstrators protest against immigration enforcement operations on February 4 in Nogales, Arizona [Ross D Franklin/AP Photo]

Ten demands from Democrats

Currently, Democrats are focused on changes to DHS’s immigration operations, particularly through programmes like Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and Customs and Border Protection (CBP).

But any funding shortfall stands to affect other Homeland Security functions as well, including the services offered by Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) and the Transportation Security Administration (TSA), which conducts security screenings at airports.

Top Democrats, however, have argued that a Homeland Security shutdown is necessary, given the abuses that have unfolded under President Donald Trump’s immigration crackdown.

Just last month, two US citizens, Alex Pretti and Renee Nicole Good, were killed at the hands of immigration agents in Minneapolis, Minnesota, in incidents that were caught on bystander video.

Their shooting deaths have since gone viral, prompting international outrage. Other footage shows masked agents deploying chemical agents and beating civilians who were documenting their activities or protesting – activities protected under the US Constitution.

To protect civil liberties and avoid further bloodshed, Democrats on Wednesday night released a series of 10 demands.

Many pertain to agent transparency. One of the demands was a ban on immigration agents wearing face masks, and another would require them to prominently display their identification number and agency.

Body cameras would also be mandated, though the Democrats clarified that the footage obtained through such devices should only be used for accountability, not to track protesters.

Other proposed rules would codify use-of-force policies in the Homeland Security Department and prohibit entry into households without a judicial warrant, as has been common practice under US law. They would also outlaw racial profiling as a metric for conducting immigration stops and arrests.

Political battle over funding

Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer said he was “astounded to hear” that Republicans considered the demands to be unreasonable.

“It’s about people’s basic rights. It’s about people’s safety,” Schumer said. He called on Republicans to “explain why” they objected to such standards.

In a joint statement with House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, Schumer appealed to members of both parties to coalesce around what he described as common-sense guardrails.

“Federal immigration agents cannot continue to cause chaos in our cities while using taxpayer money that should be used to make life more affordable for working families,” Schumer and Jeffries wrote.

“It is critical that we come together to impose common sense reforms and accountability measures that the American people are demanding.”

Already, Democrats succeeded in separating Homeland Security funding from a spending bill passed on Tuesday to prevent a partial government shutdown.

Some Democrats and Republicans have pushed for a second split in order to vote on funding for ICE and CBP separately from FEMA and TSA spending.

But Republican leaders have opposed holding separate votes on those agencies, with Thune arguing it would amount to giving Democrats the ability to “defund law enforcement”.

Thune added that he would encourage Democrats to submit their reforms in legislation separate from Homeland Security funding.

Ireland must ‘stop rot’ after Paris humbling

Jonathan Bradley

BBC Sport NI senior journalist
  • 73 Comments

On an earlier than usual Six Nations opening night, Ireland fluffed their lines in Paris on Thursday, beginning their 2026 campaign with a resounding 36-14 defeat by France that was as bruising to the ego as it was the body.

These sides may have won the past four titles in this competition between them but, for the second season in a row, there was only one winner when they went head-to-head.

An Ireland performance that was described by their head coach Andy Farrell as lacking “intent” continued a number of worrying trends from both the autumn and prior.

Coming into the game as considerable underdogs, the head coach had tried to reframe the changing narrative as his side now being the hunter rather than hunted.

For much of the 80 minutes in Paris, they looked like easy prey for superior opposition.

“It’s coming again next week [against Italy],” former Ireland lock Donncha O’Callaghan told BBC Sport.

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Flat performance leaves questions unanswered

Josh van der Flier stands with hands on hipsGetty Images

With Farrell rolling the dice in his selection – dropping James Lowe as well as giving Cian Prendergast a rare start – there were interesting subplots aplenty as the game neared.

Such was the nature of the Paris performance, however, that few such themes could be given fair scrutiny.

Ireland had picked a team to compete in the air but rarely challenged in that regard with the new-look back three of Jamie Osborne, Tommy O’Brien and Jacob Stockdale largely on the periphery.

While the loss of both usual starting props to injury, as well as two back-ups on the loose-head side, was unwanted, it gave the opportunity for others to step up and show what they can do, yet the set-piece was rendered a virtual non-factor.

Indeed, Ireland won a scrum penalty in the 45th minute but, such was the lack of pressure elsewhere, it was the first time Les Bleus had drawn a whistle from Karl Dickson.

Discipline had been a key area to improve after the autumn but, while Ireland did concede only six penalties, they frequently did not get close enough to infringe either, with 38 missed tackles on the night.

Ireland’s failure to get to grips with the non-negotiables – what Farrell called the “main part of the game” – left little point in sifting through much else.

“I think you make your own luck in this game,” said Farrell.

“Without the ball, I thought we lost that battle in the first half. The things like the high ball and winning the scraps on the floor, running through tackles or missing tackles etc – that’s the main part of the game.

Ireland again look level below the world’s best

Irrespective of another World Cup quarter-final exit in 2023 – against, it should be remembered, a New Zealand side who produced a brilliant performance on the night – Ireland felt on par with the very best in the game just a little over two years ago.

They appeared to put paid to any notion of a World Cup hangover when they opened the 2024 Six Nations against France, winning 38-17 against 14 men in Marseille, but it has subsequently been a very different story.

In the nine games since against the four sides currently above them in the world rankings, Ireland have won two and lost seven.

Five of the losses, and none of the wins, have been by margins of 10 points or more and there were times, especially when 29-0 down early in the second half, when this appeared the widest gap of the lot.

Selection policy increasingly called into question

Ireland's benchGetty Images

Few sides in the world could cope with losing three players in one position, especially one as specialised as loose-head prop.

Jeremy Loughman had just five caps before Thursday’s game, while Michael Milne’s only previous Tests were as a replacement against Georgia and Portugal.

While that certainly speaks to Ireland’s injury problems, it is worth noting that even before Ireland’s loose-head stocks were decimated, Andrew Porter’s two primary back-ups, Jack Boyle and Paddy McCarthy, still have just eight caps between them.

That can be said to be a legacy of the continued reliance on Cian Healy right up to the point of his retirement last year but the situation in not confined to just one position.

Injuries are inevitable. Yet in the main, Ireland’s squad – outside their starting XV and a handful of select others – feels underexposed to the highest level of Test rugby.

For instance, reserve scrum-half Craig Casey has been part of the squad for almost five years and won his 25th cap from the bench in the Stade de France but has never started a Six Nations game against opposition other than Italy – he saw only seven minutes of action on Thursday.

Nick Timoney led the resurgence off the bench. The unwaveringly consistent Ulster back row scored his side’s first points of the game and led the belated charge at France.

Almost five years after his debut, and six months beyond his 30th birthday, this was his first Six Nations cap.

“You could use the excuses and they are there, the injuries, we haven’t the depth of squad to go that deep, but there’s been a fundamental thought of relying on the Leinster base and for the last few years that hasn’t gone as well for the Leinster team,” said O’Callaghan.

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Venezuela’s National Assembly approves amnesty bill in first of two votes

An amnesty law that would provide clemency to political prisoners in Venezuela has passed an initial vote unanimously in the National Assembly, stirring hopes among the country’s opposition.

On Thursday, members of both the governing socialist party and the opposition delivered speeches in favour of the new legislation, known as the Amnesty Law for Democratic Coexistence.

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“The path of this law is going to be full of obstacles, full of bitter moments,” said Jorge Rodriguez, the head of the National Assembly.

But he added that it would be necessary to “swallow hard” in order to help the country move forward.

“We ask for forgiveness, and we also have to forgive,” Rodriguez said.

But critics nevertheless pointed out that the text of the bill has yet to be made public, and it offers no clemency for individuals accused of serious crimes, including drug trafficking, murder, corruption or human rights violations.

Instead, media reports about the legislation indicate that it focuses on charges often levelled against protesters and opposition leaders.

Jorge Rodriguez speaks into a microphone and holds up a picture of Nicolas Maduro
Venezuela’s National Assembly President Jorge Rodriguez holds a picture of late Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez as he speaks on February 5 [Leonardo Fernandez Viloria/Reuters]

What does the bill say?

The bill would grant amnesty to individuals accused of crimes like treason, terrorism, rebellion, resisting authorities, instigation of illegal activities, and spreading hate, if those crimes were committed in the context of political activism or protest.

Opposition leaders like Maria Corina Machado would also see bans on their candidacy for public office lifted.

In addition, the legislation specifies certain events that would qualify for amnesty, including the demonstrations that unfolded in 2007, 2014, 2017, 2019 and 2024.

That period stretches from the presidency of the late President Hugo Chavez, founder of the “chavismo” movement, through the presidency of his handpicked successor, Nicolas Maduro.

Both Chavez and Maduro were accused of the violent suppression of dissent, through arbitrary arrest, torture and extrajudicial killings.

But on January 3, the administration of United States President Donald Trump launched a military operation in Venezuela to abduct Maduro and his wife, Cilia Flores. They have since been transported to New York City, where they await trial on charges related to drug trafficking.

While members of Venezuela’s opposition have cheered the military operation as a long overdue move, experts have argued that the US likely violated international law as well as Venezuela’s sovereignty in removing Maduro from power.

Nicolas Maduro Guerra walks past a portrait of his father
Nicolas Maduro Guerra, son of ousted president Nicolas Maduro, walks by portraits depicting late Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez and independence hero Simon Bolivar on February 5 [Leonardo Fernandez Viloria/Reuters]

Weighing Maduro’s legacy

Images of Chavez were a common sight during Thursday’s debate at the National Assembly, which has been dominated since 2017 by members of the chavismo movement.

That year, Venezuela’s top court dissolved the opposition-led National Assembly and briefly absorbed its powers, before re-establishing a legislature stacked with Maduro supporters.

In 2018 and again in 2024, Maduro claimed victory in contested elections that critics say were marred by fraud.

In the July 2024 vote, for instance, the government refused to release voter tallies, as was previously standard practice. The opposition, however, obtained copies of nearly 80 percent of the tallies, which contradicted the government’s claims that Maduro had won a third six-year term.

After Maduro’s abduction last month, the remnants of his government remained in power.

Within days, his vice president — Delcy Rodriguez, the sister of the National Assembly leader — was sworn in as interim president.

She used her inaugural speech to denounce the “kidnapping of two heroes who are being held hostage: President Nicolás Maduro and First Lady Cilia Flores”.

Rodriguez has nevertheless cooperated with US demands, including by supporting a bill to open Venezuela’s nationalised oil industry to foreign investment.

On the floor of the National Assembly on Thursday, her brother Jorge raised a photo of Chavez holding a crucifix while he spoke. Maduro’s son, National Assembly member Nicolas Maduro Guerra, also presented remarks.

“Venezuela cannot endure any more acts of revenge,” Maduro Guerra said as he appealed for “reconciliation”.

Venezuela’s opposition reacts

Still, opposition members in the National Assembly expressed optimism about the bill.

National Assembly representative Tomas Guanipa, for instance, called it the start of a “new, historic chapter” in Venezuelan history, one where political dissidents would no longer be “afraid to speak their minds for fear of being imprisoned”.

Nearly 7.9 million Venezuelans have left the country in recent decades, fleeing political persecution and economic instability.

But there have been lingering concerns about the human rights situation in Venezuela in the weeks following Maduro’s abduction — and whether it is safe to return home.

President Rodriguez has pledged to release political detainees and close the infamous prison El Helicoide, where reports of torture have emerged. But some experts say the number of people released does not match the number the government has reported.

The human rights group Foro Penal, for instance, has documented 383 releases since January 8.

That figure, however, is lower than the 900 political prisoners the government has claimed to have released. Foro Penal estimates 680 political prisoners remain in detention.

Opposition figures also allege that the government continues to intimidate and harass those who voice sympathy for Maduro’s removal and other opinions that run contrary to the chavismo movement.

Still, the head of Foro Penal, Alfredo Romero, applauded the initial passage of the amnesty law as a step forward.

“Amnesty is the framework that will ensure… that the past does not serve to halt or derail transition processes,” Romero told the news agency AFP.

Van Gerwen wins opening Premier League night

Ian Mitchelmore

BBC Sport Wales at Utilita Arena, Newcastle
  • 3 Comments

Michael van Gerwen kick-started his bid for an eighth Premier League title in style with victory on night one of the 2026 tournament in Newcastle.

The Dutchman beat compatriot Gian van Veen 6-4 in the final to earn the £10,000 nightly prize and claim the first five points of the new season.

“It’s definitely a good start – without even playing my A performance, I still won,” he told Sky Sports.

“I think I was deadly. I had some fantastic finishing in the right moments.

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Van Veen impressed on debut and edged to a 6-4 quarter-final win over world number one Luke Littler – who beat him in the 2026 World Championship final.

He followed up that triumph with a 6-4 win in the semi-finals against 2021 champion Jonny Clayton – who had averaged 109.81 in defeating debutant Josh Rock 6-2 in the last eight.

But Van Veen came unstuck in a tight contest with Van Gerwen, who averaged seven points more than the European champion in the final to take victory.

It was a real boost for Van Gerwen, who failed to reach finals night last year for only the second time in 13 attempts.

The three-time world champion reeled off six consecutive legs to come from 2-0 down and beat Stephen Bunting 6-2 in the quarter-finals.

In the semi-finals, he earned another 6-2 win over reigning champion Luke Humphries – who had edged past Gerwyn Price 6-5 in a last-eight thriller.

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Premier League Darts night one results

Quarter-finals

Josh Rock 2-6 Jonny Clayton

Luke Littler 4-6 Gian van Veen

Luke Humphries 6-5 Gerwyn Price

Stephen Bunting 2-6 Michael van Gerwen

Semi-finals

Jonny Clayton 4-6 Gian van Veen

Luke Humphries 2-6 Michael van Gerwen

Final

Premier League Darts table

Premier League Darts format and points system

Premier League Darts is played across 16 initial weeks in the league stage with quarter-finals, semi-finals and a final each night.

Each of the eight players is guaranteed to face the other seven in the quarter-finals in weeks one to seven and 9-15, with week eight and week 16 fixtures done off the table. It means we will get fourth v fifth in Sheffield on the final league-stage night, with the play-off spots potentially on the line.

Players earn two points per quarter-final win, an additional point if they win their semi-final and five for winning the night.

The top four players after the group stage progress to the play-off night at London’s O2 Arena on 23 May, with first facing fourth and second against third in a best-of-19-leg match. The final, which is the best of 21 legs, follows.

Premier League Darts night two order of play

Thursday, 12 February – FAS Dome, Antwerp

Quarter-finals (from 19:15 GMT)

Luke Littler v Luke Humphries

Michael van Gerwen v Josh Rock

Jonny Clayton v Stephen Bunting

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Police Arrest Four Kidnap Suspects In Ondo

The Ondo State Police Command has arrested four members of a kidnapping syndicate operating in the Ilu-Abo area of Akure North Local Government Area of the state.

The arrest was confirmed by the Command’s spokesperson, Abayomi Jimoh, in a statement made available to journalists in Akure on Thursday.

According to Jimoh, one of the suspects, identified as Abenaguna Muhammad, was apprehended by residents of the Ilu-Abo community while in possession of suspected criminal charms.

“On Thursday, 29th January 2026, acting on proactive and credible intelligence, vigilant members of the Ilu-Abo community apprehended one Abenaguna Muhammad, male, found in possession of various criminal charms.

“The suspect was immediately handed over to police operatives for discreet investigation,” he stated.

READ ALSO: IGP Directs Tactical Deployment, Manhunt After Kwara Attack

He explained that further investigation and interrogation of the suspect led to the arrest of three additional members of the syndicate.

“During the investigation, the suspect confessed to being a member of a kidnapping syndicate operating along the Ala/Ilu-Abo axis and actively involved in the recent violent attack and abduction recorded in that area. He further disclosed that the syndicate was led by one Lanre, popularly known as ‘Lanre Tomato’, alongside two others, Ojo, male, and Pius, male,” Jimoh added.

The police spokesperson recalled that on January 25, 2026, armed men attacked residents of the Ilu-Abo community, shot one person, abducted another, and inflicted injuries on two others, an incident that prompted the launch of intensive security surveillance in the area.

Ruthless France thrash Ireland in Six Nations opener

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Matt Gault

BBC Sport NI Senior Journalist
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Men’s Six Nations

France (22) 36

Tries: Bielle-Biarrey 2, Jalibert, Ollivon, Attissogbe Cons: Ramos 4 Pen: Ramos

Ireland (0) 14

Ruthless France inflicted more pain on Ireland as the Six Nations holders opened their title defence with a bonus-point victory at a buoyant Stade de France.

Having crushed Ireland’s title hopes in emphatic fashion in Dublin last year, Les Bleus – with returning captain Antoine Dupont pulling the strings – roared into a 22-0 half-time lead following a one-sided first half that was not without controversy.

France’s first try was scored by the electric Louis Bielle-Biarrey, but only after what appeared to be a forward pass in the build-up.

Matthieu Jalibert and Charles Ollivon also crossed in the first half, before 2025 top try-scorer Bielle-Biarrey’s stylish second secured France’s bonus point seven minutes after the interval.

At that point, France looked poised to surpass the 42 points they managed in Dublin last year, but Ireland refused to give in and narrowed the deficit with tries from replacement forwards Nick Timoney and Michael Milne.

The hosts, however, had the final word when Theo Attissogbe capped a thoroughly satisfying evening for the tournament favourites.

Bielle-Biarrey brilliance puts hosts in control

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With an extensive injury list, this was always going to be a big ask for Ireland.

Severely depleted at both prop positions and without potential gamebreakers like Hugo Keenan and Mack Hansen, Farrell’s hand was weakened before he brought his squad back to the scene of their agonising World Cup quarter-final loss to New Zealand in 2023.

But even if Ireland feel hard done by calls that did not go their way, there is no question they were simply outplayed at times by a scintillating French outfit driven on by a delighted Parisian crowd.

While Ollivon’s knock-on denied France a second-minute try, Bordeaux speedster Bielle-Biarrey beat Jamison Gibson-Park, rode Sam Prendergast’s tap tackle and ghosted past Jacob Stockdale to finish a move that featured a suspected forward pass from Nicolas Depoortere to Yoram Moefana.

The high-intensity, unstructured nature of the game suited France’s fleet-footed backline, but it was an Irish defensive lapse that led to the home side’s second try.

After Tommy O’Brien was forced to dot the ball down in the Irish in-goal area and concede a scrum, Dupont – making his Test return after suffering a serious knee injury against Ireland 11 months ago – popped the ball to Jalibert for the fly-half to mark his first international appearance since last year’s Six Nations with a well-taken try.

With Ireland already on the ropes, Ollivon surged past Caelan Doris and slid across the whitewash to give the hosts a commanding halfway lead.

Ireland fightback in vain

When Bielle-Biarrey scampered clear for his second – after a Dupont chip and outrageous volley with the outside of his left boot from Thomas Ramos – and France’s fourth try, Ireland looked on course to be on the end of one of their heaviest defeats.

But a gutsy second-half display – that echoed November’s chaotic defeat by South Africa – allowed them to at least get a few scores on the board, with Timoney finishing after a line-break from his Ulster team-mate Stuart McCloskey.

Then replacement tight-head prop Milne marked his Six Nations debut when he burrowed over after another McCloskey surge.

A third Irish try would have stirred French nerves but, while Farrell’s side applied pressure, France’s defence stood firm, allowing their backs to finish with a flourish as Attissogbe crossed in the corner to complete a miserable Stade de France return for Ireland.

Without established Test veterans Uini Atonio, Gregory Alldritt, Damian Penaud and Gael Fickou, this was a glimpse into France’s destructive potential.

Ireland players dejected at full-timeGetty Images

Line-ups

France: Ramos; Attissogbe, Depoortere, Moefana, Bielle-Biarrey; Jalibert, Dupont (capt); Gros, Marchand, Aldegheri, Ollivon, Guillard, Cros, Jegou, Jelonch.

Replacements: Mauvaka, Neti, Montagne, Auradou, Meafou, Nouchi, Serin, Gourgues.

Ireland: Osborne; O’Brien, Ringrose, McCloskey, Stockdale; S Prendergast, Gibson-Park; Loughman, Sheehan, Clarkson, McCarthy, Beirne, C Prendergast, Van der Flier, Doris (capt).

Match officials

Referee: Karl Dickson (Eng)

Assistant Referees: Angus Gardner (Aus) & Jordan Way (Aus)

Television match official: Ian Tempest (Eng)

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