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The United States deports criminals to Esvatini after their country rejects them

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The U.S. Department of Homeland Security announced Tuesday that an immigration from various countries that refused to withdraw its citizens had landed in Eswatini, a southern African country.

“Eswatini, a safe third country deportation flight to southern Africa, has landed – this flight has made such a unique savage that their home country refuses to bring them back.”

“These fallen monsters have been terrorizing the American community,” she continued.

This comes after the U.S. Supreme Court last month’s green light for the Trump administration to resume deportation of immigrants outside of its own without providing them with opportunities to show the harm they may face in their own country, allowing the federal government to further implement the president’s massive deportation agenda.

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Vietnamese and Jamaican citizens were deported to Eswatini, a southern African country. (DHS)

McLaughlin, who listed five deportations from Vietnam, Jamaica, Laos, Cuba and Yemen, said she was convicted of serious crimes, including child rape and murder.

A Vietnamese national was convicted of rape, a Jamaican citizen was convicted of murder, robbery and weapon possession, a Lao citizen was convicted of murder, murder and theft and aggravated the attack with deadly weapons, possession of methamphetamine and methamphetamine and driving a car under control.

She said a Cuban citizen was convicted of murder and aggravated assault, including police, as well as Grand Theft Auto, avoiding law enforcement and reckless driving, and Yemeni citizen was convicted of homicide, assault and assault, and officials who resist and obstruct dependent adults, which are harmful to the human body and cause great harm.

Immigration in Laos and Cuba

A Lao citizen and a Cuban citizen deported to Soln Africa. (DHS)

Earlier this month, a government official said in a memo that immigrants could be deported to countries outside their own country with only six hours of notice.

U.S. immigration and customs enforcement will typically wait at least 24 hours to inform immigrants to dismiss them to “third countries,” according to a July 9 memorandum by Todd Lyons, the agency’s acting director, adding that the agency can still delete the six hours they give to those countries “in a long time” with individuals “in a long time”.

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Yemeni citizens

Yemeni citizen was deported by the Ministry of Homeland Security. (DHS)

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Immigrants can be sent to countries that vow not to persecute or torture them “no further procedures are required”, the memo said.

New ICE policies suggest that the government may act quickly to send immigrants around the world.

Human rights advocates’ due process and other issues regarding the president’s immigration policy have attracted attention.

Reuters contributed to the report.

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