The government of the Kingdom of Aswini (the small, non -coastal African state) confirmed that it had received 5 individuals who were deported from the United States during the era of President Donald Trump.
In a statement issued yesterday, Wednesday, government spokeswoman Thabiti Medlouli said that the deportations were “the result of the most famous of intensive contacts at the highest levels.”
“The five prisoners are in the country and are detained in reform facilities within isolated units, where the perpetrators of similar crimes are held,” she added.
However, Mudawali implicitly recognized the existence of human rights concerns about accepting run -up individuals whose countries do not belong to Aswini.
“As a member of the international community, the Kingdom of Swatini is committed to international agreements and diplomatic protocols related to the return of individuals, while ensuring that legal procedures and respect for human rights,” she said.
She indicated in her statement that Aswatini will cooperate with the International Organization for Migration “to facilitate the transit of prisoners into their countries of origin.”
Deportation to third countries
These deportations fall within a broader trend followed by the Trump administration by deporting foreign citizens to countries that they do not belong to.
The White House justified this policy as necessary in cases where the countries of origin refuse to receive their majestic citizens.
But critics believe that the administration depends on countries that have a documented record of human rights violations, which exposes the stage to the risk of inhuman treatment.
Humanitarian organizations have also expressed concern that the frequency of rapid deportations during the Trump era deprives the stage of the opportunity of legal appeal, which violates their right to fair judicial procedures.
On Tuesday, a spokeswoman for the US Department of Homeland Security, Treesha McLeglin, revealed the recent deportations to Aswini, noting that the stage are citizens of Laos, Vietnam, Jamaica, Cuba and Yemen.
“A safe deportation trip fell to a third country in Swatini, South Africa. This trip conveyed so brutal individuals that their countries of origin refused to receive them,” she wrote on social media.
She claimed that the stage was convicted of crimes such as murder, rape and assault on children, and described them as “deviant monsters” they were “terrifying American societies.”
A group deportation campaign
Since he took office for a second term last January, Trump has launched a mass deportation campaign, and as part of this campaign, his government deported individuals claiming to be criminals to third countries such as El Salvador and South Sudan.
Last March, the administration deported about 200 Venezuelan to El Salvador, where their heads were shaved and imprisoned at the anti -terrorist detention center, a very guarded prison whose circumstances were described as torture.
It was reported that the Trump administration paid about $ 6 million to El Salvador to imprison these men.
Last May, reports appeared that the administration was planning to deport migrants to Libya.
The federal judiciary quickly stopped the deportation, and Libyan officials denied these reports, but the lawyer of the migrants confirmed to American media that the trip was almost taking off, before stopping the airport runway due to a judicial order.
Later in the same month, a journey from the United States took off 8 pamphlets to southern Sudan, a country that the US State Department recognizes itself of the existence of “major human rights problems” in it, and these problems include reliable reports of out -of -law killings, torture and life -threatening prison conditions, and warns the US State Department against traveling to it.
The course of the trip was transferred to Djibouti after a federal court in Massachusetts ruled that the eight men were not given a sufficient opportunity to challenge their deportation and they were from countries, including Laos, Mexico, Myanmar, Cuba and Vietnam.
However, on June 23, the US Supreme Court issued a brief order to raise the minimum decision of the court, which allowed the resumption of deportation to southern Sudan.
The three judges with liberal tendencies in the Supreme Court issued a severe protest from 19 pages, describing the majority decision as a “grave violation” of the court’s authority, and criticized the president’s actions as a transgression of power.
“The government has made clear in word and indeed it considers itself not bound by the law, free to deport anyone anywhere without a notice or an opportunity to listen to it,” Judge Sonia Sotomoor wrote.
She added, “There is no evidence in this case that the government has confirmed that the countries he chose (Libya, El Salvador, and South Sudan) will not be tortured against the stage.”
Fears about my insurdance
Critics have expressed similar concerns about the deportation of immigrants to Aswini, with a population of 1.23 million, located in northeastern South Africa.
Aswini is an absolute monarchy, and its leader, King Maswati III, was accused of suppressing the opposition using violence. In 2021, it was claimed that the security forces killed dozens of protesters participating in demonstrations in support of democracy, and in the aftermath of this, a number of politicians were sentenced to prison for decades for inciting violence, a charge that critics say are fabricated to silence opposition voices.
However, the Aswini government defended yesterday, Wednesday, its commitment to human rights in its statement to public opinion.
She said that the decision to accept the five averages from the United States was taken for the benefit of the two countries.
“The Kingdom of Swatini and the United States of America enjoyed fruitful bilateral relations that spanned more than 5 decades,” the statement said.
He added, “Consequently, every agreement to enter is concluded with great care and accurate consideration, while placing the interests of the two countries in the foreground.”
Anxious note
And the Washington Post earlier this week obtained a memorandum indicating that Trump administration officials may be aware that they are preparing individuals to countries that do not guarantee their human rights.
The memorandum dated July 9th indicates that the Immigration and Customs Administration may deport non -citizens to third countries, even in the event that reliable diplomatic guarantees are not received not to practice torture or persecution as long as certain conditions are met.
The memo added that these deportations may be made with a notice of no more than 6 hours in “emergency conditions”.