Opposition to the Senate border bill jeopardizes help for Afghans who aided U.S. troops
Read full article: Opposition to the Senate border bill jeopardizes help for Afghans who aided U.S. troopsThe massive $118 billion Senate border bill not only includes once-in-a-decade border security legislation and wartime aid to Israel and Ukraine, but also offers a chance for the U.S. to keep its promise to Afghans who worked alongside U.S. soldiers in America’s longest war.
Michigan community first in United States to offer Eid as paid holiday for city employees
Read full article: Michigan community first in United States to offer Eid as paid holiday for city employeesDearborn will become the first city in the United States to offer “Eid” as a paid holiday for city employees.

Saudi princess ordered assault
Read full article: Saudi princess ordered assaultPrincess Hassa bint Salman Al Saud was handed a 10-month suspended sentence and fined 10,000 ($11,000) by a French court Thursday. Her bodyguard was handed an eight-month suspended prison sentence and ordered to pay a 5,000 ($5,600) fine. Ashraf Eid, an Egyptian-born French national, had said the princess's bodyguard attacked him after she accused him of taking photos and videos of her in September 2016. According to Eid's account read in court in July, when the princess saw him, she allegedly ordered her bodyguard Rani Saidi to take his phone. You'll see how you should speak to a princess, how one should speak to the royal family."

Saudi princess on trial for Paris attack
Read full article: Saudi princess on trial for Paris attackHassa bint Salman Al Saud is being tried in absentia on charges of armed violence and complicity to hold someone against their will. According to Eid's account read in court, when the princess saw him she allegedly ordered her bodyguard Rani Saidi to take his phone. Eid alleged that the princess then insulted him, saying, "You're all the same, bastards, dogs. You'll see how you should speak to a princess, how one should speak to the royal family." Saidi said he assumed the workman was planning to distribute the private photos of the princess because "every Arab wants to take her picture.
