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DHS sends migrants to Eswatini in new 3rd-country deportation

DHS sends migrants to Eswatini in new 3rd-country deportation

Axios13 hours ago
The Trump administration deported five migrants from Cuba, Jamaica, Laos, Vietnam and Yemen to the tiny African nation of Eswatini on Tuesday, the Department of Homeland Security announced.
The big picture: The deportation flights came after the Supreme Court last month allowed the administration to resume deportations of migrants to third countries that were not their place of origin.
Acting director of Immigration and Customs Enforcement director Todd Lyons said in a memo that such deportations could take place within six hours of notification "in exigent circumstances," the Washington Post first reported this week.
However, Lyons said in the July 9 memo that ICE would typically wait 24 hours after informing people that they would be deported.
Driving the news: "NEW: a safe third country deportation flight to Eswatini in Southern Africa has landed— This flight took individuals so uniquely barbaric that their home countries refused to take them back," Department of Homeland Security spokeswoman Tricia McLaughlin said on X Tuesday night.
They were convicted of a range of crimes that included child rape and murder, according to McLaughlin.
The intrigue: It wasn't immediately clear when Trump officials had made a deal with their counterparts in Eswatini to send migrants to the southern African nation or what the terms of any agreement were.
Flashback: Following the Supreme Court ruling, eight men from Asia and Latin America who were at the center of the case were deported to South Sudan earlier this month.
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