
Group stranded with Ice in Djibouti shipping container after removal from US
A group of men removed from the US to Djibouti, in east Africa, are stranded in a converted shipping container together with the US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (Ice) officers sent to supervise them after a deportation flight to South Sudan was stopped by an American court.
The eight deportees and 13 Ice staff have begun to 'feel ill', the US government said.
Eight men, from Latin America, Asia and South Sudan, and the Ice staff have been stuck at a US naval base since late May. The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) said that the Ice officers began to fall ill 'within 72 hours of landing' in Djibouti, and continue to suffer from suspected bacterial upper respiratory infections.
The Trump administration had attempted to send the eight detainees, who it said had been convicted of criminal offenses, to South Sudan, but a judge intervened to stop their flight in May, arguing that they were entitled to challenge the deportation in the courts.
Mellissa Harper, a top official at the DHS and Ice, said in a court declaration that the detainees are being held in a shipping container that was previously converted into a conference room. The Ice officers are 'sharing very limited sleeping quarters', Harper said, with only six beds between 13 people.
In the declaration, Harper said burn pits in Djibouti have led to Ice officials experiencing 'throat irritation'. She said the outside temperature frequently exceeds 100F (38C) in the daytime, and said Ice officials were at risk of malaria because they did not take anti-malaria medication before arriving in Djibouti.
'Within 72 hours of landing in Djibouti, the officers and detainees began to feel ill,' Harper said, but they are unable to obtain proper testing for a diagnosis.
Harper added: 'Upon arrival in Djibouti, officers were warned by US Department of Defense officials of imminent danger of rocket attacks from terrorist groups in Yemen. The Ice officers lack body armor or other gear that would be appropriate in the case of an attack.'
The declaration detailed the conditions that the detainees face, including only being allowed to shower once a day, and being subjected to 'pat-downs and searches' during trips to the restroom, which is 40 yards from the shipping container where they are being held. Harper said there is limited lighting in the area, 'which makes visibility difficult and creates a significant security risk for both the officers and aliens'.
The Trump administration had attempted to send the eight men to their home countries of Myanmar, Cuba, Vietnam, Laos, Mexico and South Sudan. Those countries declined to accept them, however, and US authorities then arranged to fly them to South Sudan in late May.
Brian Murphy, a US district judge in Boston, intervened, ruling that the administration had 'unquestionably' violated his earlier order, issued in April, which ruled that anyone being deported to third-party countries had the right to challenge it legally.
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The Guardian
15 hours ago
- The Guardian
Group stranded with Ice in Djibouti shipping container after removal from US
A group of men removed from the US to Djibouti, in east Africa, are stranded in a converted shipping container together with the US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (Ice) officers sent to supervise them after a deportation flight to South Sudan was stopped by an American court. The eight deportees and 13 Ice staff have begun to 'feel ill', the US government said. Eight men, from Latin America, Asia and South Sudan, and the Ice staff have been stuck at a US naval base since late May. The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) said that the Ice officers began to fall ill 'within 72 hours of landing' in Djibouti, and continue to suffer from suspected bacterial upper respiratory infections. The Trump administration had attempted to send the eight detainees, who it said had been convicted of criminal offenses, to South Sudan, but a judge intervened to stop their flight in May, arguing that they were entitled to challenge the deportation in the courts. Mellissa Harper, a top official at the DHS and Ice, said in a court declaration that the detainees are being held in a shipping container that was previously converted into a conference room. The Ice officers are 'sharing very limited sleeping quarters', Harper said, with only six beds between 13 people. In the declaration, Harper said burn pits in Djibouti have led to Ice officials experiencing 'throat irritation'. She said the outside temperature frequently exceeds 100F (38C) in the daytime, and said Ice officials were at risk of malaria because they did not take anti-malaria medication before arriving in Djibouti. 'Within 72 hours of landing in Djibouti, the officers and detainees began to feel ill,' Harper said, but they are unable to obtain proper testing for a diagnosis. Harper added: 'Upon arrival in Djibouti, officers were warned by US Department of Defense officials of imminent danger of rocket attacks from terrorist groups in Yemen. The Ice officers lack body armor or other gear that would be appropriate in the case of an attack.' The declaration detailed the conditions that the detainees face, including only being allowed to shower once a day, and being subjected to 'pat-downs and searches' during trips to the restroom, which is 40 yards from the shipping container where they are being held. Harper said there is limited lighting in the area, 'which makes visibility difficult and creates a significant security risk for both the officers and aliens'. The Trump administration had attempted to send the eight men to their home countries of Myanmar, Cuba, Vietnam, Laos, Mexico and South Sudan. Those countries declined to accept them, however, and US authorities then arranged to fly them to South Sudan in late May. Brian Murphy, a US district judge in Boston, intervened, ruling that the administration had 'unquestionably' violated his earlier order, issued in April, which ruled that anyone being deported to third-party countries had the right to challenge it legally.


The Independent
a day ago
- The Independent
Sick ICE agents are stuck in Djibouti at risk of malaria and rocket attacks. Why won't Trump bring them back?
A group of immigration officers are stuck in a small east African country, plagued by smog from burn pits with human waste, at risk of malaria, and taking a dozen medications to battle chronic respiratory illness. Those 11 agents are working 12-hour shifts to guard a handful of detainees who were set to be deported to war-torn South Sudan before a judge stepped in to block their removal, citing due process violations. But the judge didn't force Donald Trump 's administration to offload those immigrants in Djibouti. Lawyers for the government had even requested that they land there. Massachusetts District Judge Brian Murphy granted their request to hold those deportees overseas, in U.S. custody, to give them a chance to receive a 'reasonable fear interview' to explain how they would face persecution or torture if they were sent to South Sudan. The Trump administration, which had requested permission to hold deportees in Djibouti, is now accusing Judge Murphy of 'stranding' ICE agents there. 'This is reprehensible and, quite frankly, pathological,' Homeland Security assistant secretary Tricia McLaughlin said. Homeland Security accused Murphy of 'putting the health and safety of law enforcement officers at risk for the sake of criminals.' In a court filing on Thursday, a top Immigration and Customs Enforcement official detailed the conditions officers are facing. Eight immigrants are sleeping in a conference room in a converted shipping container at Camp Lemonnier, a U.S. military base in Djibouti. The officers share 'very limited sleeping quarters' in a trailer with three sets of bunk beds and six beds in total, according to the declaration from Mellissa B. Harper, acting deputy executive associate director for ICE's Enforcement and Removal Operations. ICE's reliance on Department of Defense resources are 'causing disruption to the station's operations and consuming critical resources intended for service members,' according to Harper. The agents also have an 'unknown degree of exposure' to malaria 'despite taking the antimalarial as full efficacy of the medication is unknown currently,' she wrote. The use of burn pits to dispose of human waste and garbage, five miles from the base, creates a 'smog cloud' that is 'making it difficult to breathe and requiring medical treatment for the officers, who have experienced throat irritation,' Harper wrote. Officers began to feel ill within 72 hours of landing in Djibouti last month and 'continue to feel ill with symptoms such as coughing, difficulty breathing, fever, and achy joint,' symptoms that 'align with bacterial upper respiratory infection,' she added. Defense officials also warned agents they face 'imminent danger of rocket attacks from terrorist groups in Yemen,' but the officers don't have body armor or other gear to protect them, Harper said. Last week, Judge Murphy accused the administration of 'manufacturing chaos' in the case. He had previously warned that administration officials could face contempt charges after violating his weeks-old court order against summary removals of immigrants without 'meaningful' notice before they are sent to countries where they could face violence or death. He then allowed the government — by its own request — to hold those deportees overseas. But government attorneys have now 'changed their tune,' he wrote last week. 'It turns out that having immigration proceedings on another continent is harder and more logistically cumbersome' than the administration anticipated, he said. Murphy, who was appointed by President Joe Biden, has faced a barrage of attacks from the White House, which labeled him a 'far-left activist' who is trying to 'protect the violent criminal illegal immigrants.' Trump called him 'absolutely out of control' and accused him of 'hurting our country.' In court filings, Murphy said he had restrained himself by not ordering the government to 'simply return' the men so they can receive due process in the United States. 'Instead, the Court accepted Defendants' own suggestion that they be allowed to keep the individuals out of the country and finish their process abroad,' he wrote. 'To be clear, the Court recognizes that the class members at issue here have criminal histories. But that does not change due process,' Murphy added. 'The Court treats its obligation to these principles with the seriousness that anyone committed to the rule of law should understand.' several high-profile immigration cases playing out in courtrooms across the country. Administration officials have asked the Supreme Court to overrule Murphy and continue deporting people to South Sudan.


The Guardian
2 days ago
- The Guardian
Rapid snowmelt and Trump cuts compound wildfire fears in US west
Unusually warm springtime temperatures have contributed to rapid reductions in snowpacks across the western US that rival the fastest rates on record, increasing concerns around wildfire season. The rapid snowmelt, in addition to reduced staffing and budget constraints initiated by the Trump administration, has set the stage for a particularly dangerous season across the west, according to an analysis of publicly available data by the Guardian and interviews with experts in the region. The National Weather Service has issued flash flood warnings across the south-west this week as warm weather ushered in rainfall at higher than usual elevations, worsening the runoff. In several lower-elevation locations within the headwaters of the Colorado River, mountain terrain is already snow-free – the earliest complete-melting of snowpack on record. 'Such rapid melt rates are not normal,' according to a special update by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (Noaa) last month. All western states now have below-normal snowpacks, including California, where this season's snowfall was above average. About one-third of the western US is now in 'severe' drought or worse, the highest fraction in more than two years. This summer's seasonal wildfire forecast calls for a continuation of hot and dry weather, especially in the Pacific north-west. Experts now fear that quickly depleting mountains snows will limit summertime water availability in streams and rivers throughout the west, and may kick off a potential feedback loop that could intensify and expand the current drought. In addition to the ominous environmental conditions, federal fire crews are short-staffed due to accelerated retirements and staff reductions taking place across the myriad organizations that make up the nation's unified wildland firefighting force. Off-season training has been hampered by an across-the-board spending freeze instituted by Donald Trump and Elon Musk's 'department of government efficiency'. Some crews have reported constraints even on basic off-season necessities, like the inability to buy fuel for chainsaws during training exercises due to Doge setting purchase limits to $1. The reduced readiness state means that firefighters and their support teams, called incident management teams, could be quickly overwhelmed. 'The thing that has me really worried is that I don't think we're going to have enough incident management teams to handle all the large fires that are going to pop this year,' said Jim Whittington, a retired federal wildfire public affairs officer who is now a faculty member at Oregon State University. Incident management teams – which include skilled support staff such as meteorologists, cartographers and supply chain experts – are deployed on short notice whenever a prolonged and complex firefight emerges. Whittington and his colleagues estimate that cuts by the Trump administration mean federal agencies will be able to field about 15-20% fewer incident management teams this summer, even amid an outsized fire threat. At the regional level, Washington cut its wildfire prevention spending in half amid a state budget crisis, raising concern for public safety this summer. Oregon officials held a news conference last week to say that cuts to EPA, USFS and NWS staff will leave their state less prepared for this year's fires. Given that fire season is already on a record-setting pace in the prairie provinces of Canada, Whittington also expects limited support from international partners, furthering the burden for US fire crews. Sign up to First Thing Our US morning briefing breaks down the key stories of the day, telling you what's happening and why it matters after newsletter promotion 'This may be the first year in memory where we have Canada and the US having overextended potential at the same time, and so I don't expect there to be a lot of help from up north,' said Whittington. 'That's going to create some cumulative fatigue issues as we head into late summer.' The National Weather Service itself is also dealing with its own staffing constraints, with forecast offices in Sacramento and Hanford, California, recently curtailing long-standing around-the-clock services. Some meteorologists receive special training to be able to forecast weather conditions around wildfires and are loaned to incident management teams as needed. Given this year's staffing constraints, however, they may need to stay at their home offices. 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