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Rwanda becomes third African nation to take US deportees. What do we know about the secretive deals?

Rwanda becomes third African nation to take US deportees. What do we know about the secretive deals?

Rwanda has become the third African nation to enter into a deal with the Trump administration to accept migrants deported by the United States.
The Rwandan government said on Tuesday it had agreed to accept up to 250 deportees from the US for resettlement but did not immediately give any more details, including when they would arrive or what Rwanda got, if anything, out of the deal.
The US has already deported eight men it said were dangerous criminals who were in the US illegally to South Sudan and another five to Eswatini.
The US State Department and the Department of Homeland Security have not responded to requests seeking more details on the deals in Africa.
Here is what we know, and still do not know, about the largely secretive deals the US is striking.
Rwanda's deal with the US comes after a contentious migrant agreement it reached with the UK in 2022 collapsed and was ruled unlawful by Britain's Supreme Court.
That deal was meant to see people seeking asylum in the UK sent to Rwanda, where they would stay if their asylum applications were approved.
The failed deal ultimately cost the UK around 700 million pounds ($1.4 billion) in public money, including more than 200 million pounds that it gave to Rwanda and did not get back.
Rwanda said the deportees it would take from the US would be resettled there and given work training, health care and help with accommodation.
The US sent eight men from South Sudan, Cuba, Laos, Mexico, Myanmar and Vietnam to South Sudan in East Africa in early July after their deportations were held up by a legal challenge.
That led to them being kept for weeks in a converted shipping container at an American military base in nearby Djibouti.
US officials said the men had been convicted of violent crimes in the US.
When it took custody of them a month ago, the South Sudan government said it would ensure their "safety and wellbeing".
It has since declined to give other details, including where the men are being held and what their fate might be.
South Sudan has been wracked by conflict since it gained independence from Sudan in 2011 and is teetering on the edge of civil war again.
Two weeks after the South Sudan deportations, the US announced that it had sent another five men — citizens of Vietnam, Jamaica, Cuba, Yemen and Laos — to the small kingdom of Eswatini in southern Africa.
The US Department of Homeland Security said they were also violent criminals whose home countries had refused to take them back.
Eswatini's government said the men would be held in solitary confinement until their repatriation, and later said that might take up to a year.
A human rights lawyer in Eswatini has taken authorities to court, alleging the men are being denied legal representation while being held in a maximum-security prison, and questioning the legality of detaining them indefinitely when they have served their criminal sentences in the US.
US authorities did not name the men or say if they had been deported straight from prison or detained in another way.
Eswatini, which borders South Africa, is one of the world's last absolute monarchies. King Mswati III has ruled since he turned 18 in 1986.
Authorities under him are accused of violently subduing pro-democracy movements in a country where political parties are effectively banned.
Analysts say that African nations may be seeking a range of benefits from the Trump administration in return for taking deportees, including more favourable tariff rates, aid and other financial assistance, and even the easing of sanctions against some of their officials.
AP
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Tom Homan, the man frequently described as Mr Trump's 'border czar', has claimed most migrants targeted by ICE are either 'criminals' or 'national security threats'. Originally published as United States trying to deport migrant to Australia, despite him having no connection to the country

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