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The United States has reached bilateral deportation agreements with Honduras and Uganda as part of its illegal immigration repression, in accordance with the BBC CBS’s documents.
Uganda agreed to take an uncertain amount of African and Asian migrants who stated asylum on the US-Mexico border, and Honduras will receive several hundred deported people from Hispanic countries, CBS said.
This step is part of the Donald Trump administration attempt to force more countries to accept deported migrants who are not their own citizens.
The human rights campaign has condemned politics, saying that migrants are at risk of sending to countries where they can harm.
According to the agreement, Uganda agreed to accept deported migrants until they have criminal history, but it is unclear how much the country will eventually take, CBS reports.
Honduras agreed to accept migrants for two years, including families traveling with children, but the documents believe he can take more.
Both deals are included in the broader impetus of Trump administration against deportation agreements with countries on several continents – including controversial human rights reports.
So far, at least a dozen countries have agreed to accept deported migrants from other countries.
Last week, the US State Department announced that he had signed an “Safe Third Country” agreement to “share the burden of illegal immigration management”.
Several African countries are also actively taking care of the White House, and Rwanda said up to 250 migrants will be required in the United States earlier this month.
The condition of the transaction shows that Rwanda will “be able to approve every person proposed for resettlement,” the BBC government press said.
Earlier, Rwanda was criticized for his recording of human rights, including the risk of being sent to the Eastern African nation again deported to countries where they may face danger.
Earlier this year, Panama and Costa -rice agreed to take several hundred African and Asian migrants from the United States.
Government documents show that Trump administration also appealed to countries such as Ecuador and Spain to get deported migrants, CBS reports.
Since the beginning of his second term, Trump has started extensive efforts to remove undocumented migrants – a key promise in the elections that attracted mass support during this campaign.
In June, the US Supreme Court released the way to Trump to resume migrants’ deportations to the countries except for their homeland, preventing them from raising the risks they may face.
At that time, Justice Sonia Sotomar, Elena Kagan and Ketandi Brown Jackson disagreed with the resolution of the majority, calling the decision “gross abuse”.
UN rights experts and human rights groups also claim that these deletions in a nation that is not a migrant origin may violate international law.