Friday, 6 February 2015

Senate Hearing Learns Of No Clear Plan To Close Guantanamo



Audio for this story from Morning Edition will be available at approximately 9:00 a.m. ET.





More than 100 detainees remain locked up at the prison camp in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. President Obama wants Guantanamo closed, but no solution is yet in sight to close it.




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Hezbollah delegation meets Aoun over presidential crisis, Future talks


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Out Of The Shadows, TV Star Shines A Light On Immigration


On Capitol Hill, the immigration debate is a political story. But for millions of people across the country, it is something deeper. "This is not a political issue; it is a human issue," says Diane Guerrero. "Me and my parents were a family, and now we're not. We're separated."



Diane Guerrero arrives at the 21st annual Screen Actors Guild Awards in January.i



Diane Guerrero arrives at the 21st annual Screen Actors Guild Awards in January. Richard Shotwell/Richard Shotwell/Invision/AP hide caption



itoggle caption Richard Shotwell/Richard Shotwell/Invision/AP

Diane Guerrero arrives at the 21st annual Screen Actors Guild Awards in January.



Diane Guerrero arrives at the 21st annual Screen Actors Guild Awards in January.


Richard Shotwell/Richard Shotwell/Invision/AP


The American-born actress, now known for her roles in Orange is the New Black and Jane the Virgin, was 14-years-old when her parents and older brother were deported to Colombia. She remembers coming home from school to find her dad's car in the driveway, dinner on the stove, but the house empty. "At first, I did break down and cry," she says. She went to visit her parents in jail, and they gave her the option to travel to Colombia with them. Guerrero felt that she had to stay here in the U.S. "I have to finish my studies, and I have to work really hard, and try to get my family back together," she thought.


Guerrero admits that she lived "in the shadows" for years. "I could have disappeared and nobody would've known anything," she as. But as her career picked up, she felt she had to speak out. In November, she wrote an op-ed in the Los Angeles Times. "I was so scared," she remembers. "I want to be viewed like a serious actress, and I'm afraid that people are just going to see me as the poor little girl whose parents were deported when she was 14." The piece sparked some criticism, but also earned strong support from families who had been through the same thing. "That made it all worth it," she says.


Interview Highlights


On why Guerrero decided to share her story


Once I started advancing in my career, I stopped wanting to hide from my reality. And it was really difficult when people would ask me where I've come from, what my roots were, and what my childhood was like without avoiding the question, or being vague, or even lying. That's how embarrassed I felt, or afraid to share my story. I didn't think that people would understand. But as I'm coming into my own, I'm feeling I don't want to hide anymore.


On why she didn't go to Colombia with her parents


That was a lot of the response from the letter — angry people — "why didn't she just go back with her parents?" Well, it wasn't that easy. Our financial situation wasn't stable. Anybody who lives in Colombia knows that if you don't have any money — I tell you what — you don't have many options.


Her response to people who say 'But your parents broke the law'


The fact of the matter is that my parents were here and stayed, and tried to amend their situation. And because there wasn't really a way to do things — I suppose — clearly, this is what happened.


Has Guerrero's family situation informed her work as an artist?


Absolutely. I feel like you can't really be truthful as an artist, and empathize with the human experience unless you know your truth, and you're not living a lie. So I'm learning through it, and it's making me a better person, and it's making me a better artist, I think.


And Diane and I will head to Miami later this month to hear more about how immigration is shaping the American story. I'll be hosting an event there, in partnership with member station WLRN.


Share your immigrant story with us by sending an email to nprcrowdsource@npr.org.



General Security chief meets UNIFIL commander in south Lebanon tour


Political banners removed, dialogue goes on


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Lebanon professor killed in US university shooting


BEIRUT: A professor believed to be from Lebanon was shot dead Thursday at the University of South Carolina in an apparent murder-suicide, a local newspaper reported.


The State newspaper identified the victim as 45-year-old Raja Fayad, a graduate director, head of the division of applied physiology and an expert in colon cancer at the urban campus’ Arnold School of Public Health.


The State quoted witnesses as saying the shootings occurred on the fourth floor of the five-story campus building along busy Assembly Street.


Fayad was one of two who died in what police dubbed a murder-suicide at the Public Health Research Center on campus.


The State said authorities late-Thursday afternoon were at a home Fayad owned in a Lexington County subdivision near Lake Murray. Neighbors said he was Lebanese and moved into the neighborhood in 2009.


The report said he travelled to Lebanon each summer to visit his mother.


Fayad's university profile page shows that he received a degree in Allepo, Syria.


“Today, the USC family experienced a great tragedy,” president Harris Pastides said in a statement, acknowledging a murder-suicide.


Residents in the neighborhood where Fayad lived came home from work Thursday to discover a half-dozen unmarked police SUVs and cars parked at the professor’s home, according to the report.


It quoted Fathi Elsahli, a next door neighbor of Libyan descent, as saying he and Fayad got together occasionally over tea to chat in Arabic about “typical things neighbors talk about” as well as campus life at USC.


Elsahli said he and Fayad recently spoke about a stormy relationship with a woman Fayad lived with and described as his girlfriend. The problems worsened a few weeks ago after Fayad said he moved out to be with another woman, Elsahli, a part-time USC computer science teacher, said.