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Oil dips, stocks mixed after Trump holds off on Iran attack
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G7 finance ministers vow cooperation to face 'heightened risks'
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King Charles III makes unannounced visit to N. Ireland
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Mango founder's son arrested in Spain over father's death
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WHO worried about 'scale and speed' of deadly Ebola outbreak
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Germany starts sales process for bailed-out energy firm Uniper
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Irrepressible Sinner primed for career Grand Slam at Roland Garros
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China market for Nvidia AI chips to open 'over time': Huang
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Asian markets cautious, oil dips after Trump holds off on Iran attack
Frenchwoman who married GI sweetheart returns home after ICE ordeal
A Frenchwoman who moved to the United States to marry a Vietnam war veteran she first met six decades ago returned to France Friday after she was detained by US immigration authorities, the foreign minister said.
The 85-year-old woman, who was not being named at the family's request, "returned to France this morning, and we are pleased about that," Foreign Minister Jean-Noel Barrot told reporters on a visit to the southern city of Montpellier.
She had moved to Anniston, Alabama in 2025 to marry the former Air Force colonel, and was seeking a green card, which allows people to live and work permanently in the United States.
The couple first met some 60 years earlier when she was working as a bilingual secretary and he was a soldier stationed at a NATO base reportedly in Saint-Nazaire, western France, but according to US media both married other people.
Decades later, after they were both widowed, they reconnected.
According to the New York Times, the woman gave up her life in the French city of Nantes and moved to Alabama, where the couple married in April 2025.
But the American died suddenly in January at the age of 85, throwing her immigration status into uncertainty and leading to her detention by the US Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency (ICE).
US media reports said his death also ignited an inheritance dispute between the woman and his son.
The US Department of Homeland Security told AFP on Tuesday that the woman had been detained on April 1.
- 'Handcuffed and shackled -
She had entered the United States in June 2025 on a tourist visa that allowed her to stay for 90 days. However, she was still in the United States "seven months later," according to US authorities.
Citing accounts from US neighbours, her son told AFP that his mother was arrested, "handcuffed and shackled".
Regarded as the strong arm of US President Donald Trump's fierce anti-immigration campaign, the ICE agency has faced nationwide criticism of its aggressive tactics against undocumented immigrants and for the shooting deaths of two US citizens this year.
As soon as news of the French woman's arrest broke, a diplomatic source had told AFP that the French Consulate General in Atlanta was "closely monitoring the situation" and providing her with "consular protection".
When asked about ICE's approach on Thursday, Barrot criticised those methods without referring specifically to the Frenchwoman.
"There have been instances of violence that have raised our concern. But the main thing is that she is back in France, and that fully satisfies us," he said.
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A.Gasser--BTB