Eswatini Receives $5.1M from US to Accept Third-Country Deportees
Eswatini accepted $5.1 million from the US to hold at least 15 deportees without charge amid legal challenges and rights group criticism over secretive detention practices.
- On Tuesday, Eswatini confirmed it received $5.1 million from the United States government to accept third-country deportees, with Finance Minister Neal Rijkenberg saying the ministry was kept in the dark about the deal.
- The agreement, signed May 14 in Mbabane, commits Eswatini to accept up to 160 deportees under President Donald Trump's third-country deportation programme.
- Fifteen men have been flown to Eswatini and are held without charge at the Matsapha Correctional Centre, while lawyers and civil society groups in Eswatini challenge these detentions in court.
- Human rights groups warn the expulsions risk arbitrary detention, ill-treatment, and refoulement, while Amnesty International reported Roberto Mosquera del Peral began an indefinite hunger strike, urging medical and legal access.
- Neighbouring South Africa warned about cross-border risks, while Rwanda agreed to accept up to 250 deportees for roughly $7.5 million, illustrating larger-scale transfers.
26 Articles
26 Articles
Namibia: Eswatini Confirms Receiving $5.1m From the U.S.\ for Accepting Deportees
Eswatini's government has confirmed that it received $5.1m (£3.8m) from the Trump administration for accepting people deported from the US as part of a hard-line approach towards immigration.
US Paid Eswatini Over $5 Million To Accept Deported Migrants
The United States ruling class paid the African nation of Eswatini $5.1 million to accept migrants who were deported. This is a controversial agreement in which at least 15 migrants have been sent to Eswatini since the bilateral deal went into effect in May. The fifteen migrants deported to Eswatini have no ties to Africa …
U.S. Paid Eswatini Over $5 Million To Accept Deported Migrants
The United States ruling class paid the African nation of Eswatini $5.1 million to accept migrants who were deported. This is a controversial agreement in which at least 15 migrants have been sent to Eswatini since the bilateral deal went into effect in May. The fifteen migrants deported to Eswatini have no ties to Africa at all. Finance Minister Neal Rijkenberg told lawmakers on Monday that the funds formed part of a bilateral agreement signed…
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