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Oke Göttlich, The Man Shaking Up German Soccer Over Trump: ‘We Discussed At Length Our Red Lines For Boycotting The World Cup’

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He takes this newspaper’s call on a train bound for Hamburg, home of St. Pauli, continues by car and says goodbye almost an hour later in his office at the headquarters of the modest club, which he has chaired since 2014. Oke Göttlich (Hamburg, Germany; 50) is also one of the 13 vice presidents of the DFB, the German Football Association. And earlier this year, amid threats from Donald Trump’s administration to invade Greenland, Göttlich, a trained journalist, said enough was enough. “What reasons justified the boycotts by certain countries of Olympic Games in the 1980s?” he asked, referring to Moscow 1980 and Los Angeles 1984, in the Hamburger Morgenpost. “In my view, the current threat is greater than back then, so we must have this discussion; a footballer’s life is not worth more than the life of any of the people being directly or indirectly attacked by the host country of the next World Cup.”

Göttlich was referring to the United States, which in just over a month will host the final of the most prestigious tournament in world soccer, as well as 84 of the 104 matches scheduled by FIFA — the remainder will be shared by Mexico and Canada — from June 11 to July 19.

The mere idea of considering a possible boycott of the World Cup set off a national debate in Germany, a country whose men’s team has won the tournament four times, second only to Brazil, which has five titles. Göttlich drew criticism from within his own organization, the DFB, which was quick to distance itself from the hypothetical snub to the global event.

“At no point did I say Germany should boycott the 2026 World Cup,” the German official clarifies to EL PAÍS. “I was asked whether I thought it was right or wrong to go play in a country that had only days earlier threatened to take Greenland by force, and I simply reflected on the issue, opened the debate.”

Donald Trump Gianni Infantino en el estadio MetLife, en East Rutherford, Nueva Jersey, el 13 de julio.

The matter not only made the front pages of the German press but also filtered into the DFB offices. “We discussed at length what our red lines would be for boycotting a tournament of this nature,” Göttlich says. “And I recall that, for example, we concluded that if the United States attacked a NATO country, we would be at a point of no return.”

That line was not crossed, at least not up to the publication of this piece, but so far this year the United States has abducted Nicolás Maduro, threatened to invade Greenland and gone to war with Iran — developments that did not go unnoticed by the vice president of the German Football Association. “What I have been saying for months is that we must open our minds and accept the debate; we have to ask ourselves whether we should go to the World Cup,” he says. “Germany will go and play, but I am worried about the underlying issue.”

“Many of the major sporting events in recent years have been held in countries with authoritarian regimes or that violate human rights: Russia, China, Qatar, now the United States… It is time for us to raise our voices and broaden the debate,” Göttlich proposes. “Is the German national team, which defends diversity, human rights, and opposes racism, going to call out some of the questionable measures of Donald Trump’s administration, an erratic figure who seems intent on plunging the world into chaos? If they play in Texas, where the U.S. government is banning more books in schools than ever, are they going to denounce it?”

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“Football and the World Cup are an unparalleled platform to show our beliefs,” says the official, whose federation was already a protagonist in Qatar 2022 when Germany’s players covered their mouths in protest after FIFA banned the rainbow armband. “I am saddened by people’s growing fear of speaking out, of debating. Social media is tinting everything black or white, good or bad, and as soon as an issue like this is raised everything is polarized and distorted to the point that nobody wants to make a mistake and be assigned to the wrong side. That way the debate dies, and with it, democracy,” he laments.

“When I made those remarks earlier this year, I was told I only spoke that way because I was president of a modest club like St. Pauli and wanted attention for my club. I can only smile at such an accusation,” he says. “First and foremost I am a person, a citizen, and I do not leave my ideals at the door when I leave home. We are immersed in a tremendous geopolitical crisis, and that also affects sport. We cannot fold our arms and accept everything. We cannot be afraid to speak out because of a handful of criticisms. Because those who criticize, in most cases, do so to defend business, to keep the wheel turning.”

“I will not go to the World Cup, I am very clear about that,” Göttlich says as he realizes the call is ending. “I only hope that at least the tournament serves so that thousands of journalists from around the world travel to the United States and can report freely on what happens there, something that, incidentally, FIFA itself includes in its statutes, where it guarantees assistance and protection to those reporting from the regions hosting an event like the World Cup, including those who suffer reprisals for it. I will be pleased to watch from here how they keep their word in the coming weeks.”

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Beirut

Israel Continues Bombing Lebanon Despite Ceasefire Extension: ‘We Have Freedom Of Action’

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The ceasefire that has never truly stopped the fighting between Israel and Hezbollah followed the same dynamic on Thursday after being extended in a new round of talks in Washington.

On Thursday morning, Israel’s military continued its attacks, and Israel’s defense minister, Israel Katz, has made it clear that bombing will go on and that troops will maintain their positions in Lebanon.

U.S. President Donald Trump himself acknowledged hours earlier that the ceasefire — launched in April — exists only on paper. Asked how he would define a ceasefire, he replied: “I’d say in that part of the world, ceasefire is when you’re shooting in a more moderate manner.”

In the first hours after the ceasefire was extended, Israel asserted its “freedom of action” in Lebanon, both in deeds and in words. On the ground, it wounded a family — a man, his wife and their daughter — in a drone strike on their car in southern Lebanon, according to the country’s national news agency. It has also issued a new “urgent warning to residents of southern Lebanon,” stating that it is continuing its attacks south of the Zahrani River (about 25 miles from the border) and that anyone there or traveling through the area “puts their life at risk.” In the same area, one Serbian peacekeeper has been killed and two Spanish personnel injured in an attack on the U.N. mission, UNIFIL, according to reports on Thursday.

In a statement, Katz stressed that the ceasefire is “conditioned on the prompt withdrawal of Hezbollah terrorists from all areas south of the Litani River and the creation of a demilitarized zone,” while his armed forces “will continue strikes and operations in the area for the time being,” and will keep occupying and destroying villages in areas they control (including Beaufort Castle) without allowing the population to return.

Katz emphasized that Israel retains freedom of action — “with U.S. support” — including the option to strike Beirut (after Trump forced Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to back down on Tuesday) if Hezbollah attacks Israeli territory, and not only Israeli troops in Lebanon.

The new extension places the ball in Hezbollah’s court, according to a joint statement by the United States, Israel and Lebanon — whose government has declared Hezbollah’s armed activities illegal — released by the U.S. State Department. The text states that “the ceasefire is contingent on a complete cessation of Hizbollah fire and the evacuation of all Hizbollah operatives from the South Litani Sector.”

Hezbollah, for its part, rejects any “partial” ceasefire and demands a “genuine” full cessation of hostilities, including the withdrawal of Israeli troops from all Lebanese territory.

The main new element of the agreement is a plan to create “pilot zones” in Lebanon without Hezbollah presence, to be controlled by the Lebanese army. This could open the door to potential Israeli withdrawals, although it remains unclear how these would work or when they would begin. The two governments are due to meet again in two weeks with the aim of “reaching a comprehensive agreement,” the statement said.

The deal was reached during the fourth round of direct negotiations between Israel and Lebanon, held on Tuesday and Wednesday, and marked by insults that Trump directed at Netanyahu during one of their two phone calls, in which he forced the Israeli prime minister to back down from his plan to bomb Dahiyeh, the Shiite-majority suburbs of Beirut, after Tehran threatened to resume the war with the U.S.

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‘It Feels Like A Mockery’: Justo Betancourt, A Former Detainee At Alligator Alcatraz Who Received A Congratulations Note From Trump

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When Justo Betancourt, 55, was released from Alligator Alcatraz on May 14, after nearly six months in detention, he had lost 22 kilograms (48.5 lb) and could barely walk. Two days later he was admitted to hospital, on the verge of a diabetic coma. While in detention, he did not receive the insulin doses he needed, suffered strokes, and during one episode, he fell and lost a tooth. He has been left with neurological after-effects: his right hand trembles, and to climb a step, he lifts his leg from behind the thigh. “Sometimes I have to grab it and push, because it doesn’t respond,” he says on the ground floor of the apartment building where he lives, in Miami’s Little Havana. This week, President Donald Trump dedicated a message to him on Truth Social: “Welcome home to Justo Betancourt, whose Daughter, Arianne, fought very hard to free her father from Alligator Alcatraz. Enjoy your Freedom together!!!”

“It feels like a mockery. I think that’s what it is, more than anything else—a mockery,” says Betancourt, adding that the mention of his daughter has given him “a lot to think about.”

The president’s post marks the culmination of the public campaign waged for months by Arianne Betancourt, 33. Through it, she turned her father’s detention into a symbol of the resistance against Donald Trump’s immigration crackdown and became the face of allegations of human rights violations at Alligator Alcatraz.

The spotlight is not her father’s natural habitat. Justo Betancourt is a man of few words, with graying hair, a tanned complexion, and a taciturn gaze. He arrived in Miami in 1990 from Matanzas, in western Cuba, and for years he worked as a carpenter building kitchen cabinets. In 2016, he was sentenced to six years in prison for conspiracy to distribute methamphetamine, and was held in a federal prison in Nebraska until 2020. Upon his release, he was issued a deportation order and was subject to periodic check-ins with ICE. During one of those check-ins, in October, he was detained at the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) office in Miramar, north of Miami.

Arianne y Justo Betancourt, en Miami, Florida.

The campaign to secure her father’s release consumed Arianne’s life. After attending one of the vigils held every Sunday in front of Alligator Alcatraz, she quit her job as a tour guide in Miami and began volunteering with The Workers Circle, the organization that organizes the vigils. She has helped families contact their detained loved ones, publicly denounced her father’s health issues and the conditions at the detention center in Chicago, Minneapolis and Washington, and during former Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem’s congressional hearing, and is now gathering information on detainees who lack legal representation in order to connect them with pro bono attorneys.

“I saw that there was a need for someone to represent families like mine—someone who would speak out and not be afraid. And when I saw that no one else was doing it, I stepped up. I didn’t do it so that people would tell me I’d done something good, but because it was the right thing to do,” she says. “Freedom comes at a price, and staying silent is the same as being an accomplice.”

Justo Betancourt says the federal prison where he was held in Nebraska was like “a five-star hotel compared to Alligator Alcatraz.” In the heart of the Everglades, he says, 32 people share spaces measuring about six by six meters, which he describes as metal cages with three aluminum toilets. “There are 32 people, each with different thoughts, in their own world, in their own despair. And the question we all ask ourselves: Why me? What are we doing here?” he says.

Betancourt doesn’t try to hide his past. “I made a mistake, but that’s in the past. And I paid for it. I followed the law. I live a quiet life, I don’t mess with anyone, I don’t hang out with anyone. I took the advice to heart,” he adds, shrugging.

When he arrived at Alligator Alcatraz, he had to be admitted to the facility’s clinic due to a hypoglycemic episode caused by his diabetes. He spent several days handcuffed to a bed and dependent on the guards, even to go to the bathroom or drink water. For any movement, no matter how brief, detainees are handcuffed and shackled, he explains.

When his condition improved and he was transferred with the rest of the detainees, he stopped receiving the insulin he needed. “They told me, ‘It’s not in the system. You have to wait three days.’ But 90 days went by,” he recalls. His health deteriorated. “I almost went into a diabetic coma. They took me to the hospital with cardiac arrest and the early signs of a stroke.” He remained hospitalized for three days before being returned to the center. “They took me back, and my family wasn’t notified at all,” he adds.

Months later a series of transfers began, taking him to various detention centers. First he was sent to Krome, southwest of Miami, and then to Texas, where authorities attempted to deport him to Mexico. At the border, he claims to have seen people being beaten for refusing to get off the bus. Mexican authorities refused to accept him due to his health issues—heart disease and schizophrenia, in addition to diabetes—and sent him back. A second attempt to deport him via Arizona had the same result. Finally, he was sent back to Alligator Alcatraz.

Betancourt was released after a federal judge granted his petition for habeas corpus, a legal tool rarely used in immigration cases that has become one of the few avenues of recourse for detainees who challenge the legality of their detention.

Recalling those months in detention, he asserts that nowhere else did he suffer treatment comparable to that at Alligator Alcatraz, which seems to have been created on purpose “to traumatize people, with a lack of humanity,” he says thoughtfully, as he watches the roosters and hens scurrying around the building’s yard.

“At four in the morning, they turn on the lights and don’t turn them off again until midnight. You know it’s five in the morning because it’s breakfast time. You know it’s eleven because it’s lunch time, and five because it’s dinner time. Other than that, you have no sense of time.” The food arrived in boxes that sat out in the open for hours. Sometimes it went bad before he could eat it, he says.

On top of the hunger and the conditions was the uncertainty of not knowing what would happen to him. “I asked an immigration guard what was going to happen to me, and he said, ‘You’re going to die here. You’ll leave here in a box or in a box. You won’t leave here on your own two feet. By order of the president.’” Another guard told him, “Didn’t you see the movies about the Nazis?” he recalls. “They completely destroy you, they break you.”

He says the degrading treatment continued right up until he was told he would be released. The guard told him he had five minutes to make his bed and stand by the door: “Otherwise, I’d have to stay. So I quickly scrambled to gather up the sheet—since I was on the bottom bunk—and when I turned around, he was gone. Four hours later, he came to get me. Just to be mean. If he knew he had to pick me up later, why did he make me go through that?”

During those months, he says that thinking about his family was the only thing that gave him the strength to keep going. “When I got out, imagine, I couldn’t believe it. I was with Arianne, my kids, and their mom in the car, and I was looking all around, saying: Is this real, is this real? Because I’d dreamed so much about that moment, about giving them a hug, and I’d open my eyes and see the bottom of the iron bunk bed, and I’d say: Oh!”

His son, Eddy Oney Betancourt, says it broke his heart to hear his father on the phone and sense that he was trying to stay upbeat. Sometimes weeks would go by without them being able to speak, and they knew that calls could bring good or bad news. They spent Christmas and their first Thanksgiving without him. Arianne had her birthday in February. His daughter said her first words. “I prayed every day that I was in there so I could see him one more time. Because you never know what’s going to happen in those places, and I heard stories of people who lost family members [in immigration custody].”

Justo Betancourt con sus hijos Arianne y Eddy Oney, en Miami, Florida.

Arianne found Trump’s message counterproductive. “If he hadn’t created these immigration policies, I wouldn’t have had to leave behind everything I’d achieved, the life I’d built, to start fighting the government. This never should have happened.” She says she’s not sure of Trump’s intentions behind his post, but points to two possible scenarios: “I wouldn’t be doing what I do if I were easily intimidated.” So if the president is trying to use her case for his election campaign, she asserts, “he picked the wrong Cuban-American family”: “because he’s not going to use my story and the work I’ve put in to help him with the Cuban vote.”

The White House did not respond to a request for comment.

Last Sunday, Arianne and Justo Betancourt returned to the Everglades for the Sunday vigil, and they plan to go again next Sunday. Arianne says that what happened “cannot go unpunished,” and they are calling for an investigation that treats the site as a “crime scene.” “Someone has to be held accountable. There has to be justice.”

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