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Trump gets green light to send illegal migrants to Africa after Supreme Court ruling

Trump gets green light to send illegal migrants to Africa after Supreme Court ruling

The United States Supreme Court has endorsed President Donald Trump's controversial plan to deport certain categories of undocumented migrants to select African countries.
The U.S. Supreme Court approved President Trump's policy allowing the deportation of undocumented migrants to third countries with minimal notice.
This decision, made in a 6-3 ruling, overturns a previous lower court ruling that required migrants to present risks before deportation.
This ruling reflects a broader push by the Trump administration to implement stricter immigration policies under expanded authority.
The Supreme Court on Monday granted President Donald Trump's emergency request to resume deporting migrants to countries other than their homeland, including places like South Sudan, with minimal notice.
The decision gives legal backing to a policy that has drawn sharp criticism from human rights organizations, immigration advocates, and some African governments.
In a 6–3 ruling, the U.S. Supreme Court overturned a lower court decision requiring the government to give migrants a chance to explain risks they may face if deported to third countries.
The court's liberal justices—Sotomayor, Kagan, and Jackson—dissented, warning of harm to migrant rights.
The decision comes as U.S. District Judge Brian Murphy blocked a separate Trump administration effort to deport eight migrants from Myanmar, South Sudan, Cuba, Mexico, Laos, and Vietnam on a flight to South Sudan.
The government labeled them ' the worst of the worst, ' but critics say due process was denied.
According to US District Judge Brian Murphy, the government's efforts to deport migrants to third-party countries without due process 'unquestionably' violated constitutional protections.
According to the CNN, Supreme court Judge Sotomayor, in a dissent aimed at the administration's broader approach, said her colleagues in the majority were ' rewarding lawlessness ' with the decision, asserting that the Trump administration has ' openly flouted ' previous court orders.
' Rather than allowing our lower court colleagues to manage this high-stakes litigation with the care and attention it plainly requires, this court now intervenes to grant the government emergency relief from an order it has repeatedly defied, ' she wrote.
U.S. deportation pact with African nations
The Trump administration has proposed a plan to several African nations to accept deported migrants from the U.S., including non-African nationals, as part of a broader push to outsource immigration enforcement.
Rwanda has confirmed talks, while other countries like Libya, Angola, Benin, and Equatorial Guinea have been mentioned as part of the deal.
The initiative raises concerns over humanitarian risks and reintegration challenges, and may significantly influence the global trajectory of U.S. immigration policy.
Trump's hard stance on immigration
In his second term, President Donald Trump has doubled down on his hardline immigration policies, using expanded executive authority and a conservative-leaning Supreme Court to push through measures previously blocked.
Central to this renewed effort is the deportation of undocumented migrants to third countries, including several in Africa, regardless of their origin.
The administration argues this deters abuse of the asylum system and restores border control, while critics warn it violates international protections and places vulnerable individuals at risk.
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