Judge says Trump administration violated court order with deportation flight linked to South Sudan

Judge says Trump administration violated court order with deportation flight linked to South SudanNew Foto - Judge says Trump administration violated court order with deportation flight linked to South Sudan

After a deportation flight with eight migrants left Texas reportedly intended for South Sudan this week, a federal judge ruled Wednesday that the Trump administration had violated a previous order. U.S. District Court Judge Brian Murphy in Massachusetts said at a hearing that the Trump administration had failed to adhere to an injunction he issued in March preventing people from being sent to countries other than their own without opportunities to raise fears of persecution or torture. The Department of Homeland Security confirmed at a news briefing Wednesday morning that eight people from Myanmar, Laos, Vietnam, Cuba, Mexico and South Sudan were deported this week. According to DHS, many of them had violent criminal convictions, including murder and sexual assault. "The department's actions," Murphy said, "are unquestionably violative of this court's order." A State Department travel advisory warns Americans not to go to South Sudan "due to crime, kidnapping, and armed conflict" and notes that in March, because of conditions on the ground, it "ordered the departure of non-emergency U.S. government employees from South Sudan." Government attorneys said that the migrants are still in Immigration and Customs Enforcement custody and that the plane has since landed. They declined to share the location of the plane's final destination. Murphy, who relayed the sequence of events leading to the deportations after more than 30 minutes in a sealed proceeding, said the people were notified of their destination "sometime in the evening" Monday, outside business hours. He added that they left the ICE facility the next morning at the latest in the 10 a.m. hour and at the earliest before 9 a.m. Without sufficient time to consult an attorney or family members, the judge said, it was "impossible" for those people to "have a meaningful opportunity to object" to their deportations to a third country. Immigration attorneys told Murphy that at least two of their clients, from Myanmar and Vietnam, were deported Tuesday morning to South Sudan. It's possible one of the migrants, Nyo Mint, might have been diverted to his home country, Myanmar (formerly known as Burma), but his San Antonio-based immigration attorney, Jonathan Ryan, said that he is still in the dark about where his client and that he has been "disappeared." "I have not heard from my client," Ryan said. "How am I supposed to take their word that they sent him to Burma?" Ryan said the government is acting as if due process is a privilege, saying it is a problem "when we stop doing due process for unpopular people." At a DHS news conference before the hearing, spokesperson Tricia McLaughlin told reporters about the migrants that "no country on Earth wanted to accept them because their crimes were so uniquely barbaric." McLaughlin also criticized the court system. "Activist judges are on the other side, fighting to get them back onto the United States soil," she said. South Sudan could beheaded for another civil war.A 2018 power-sharing agreement between President Salva Kiir and Vice President Riek Machar ended five years of civil war. But earlier this year, violent clashes between the factions ramped up once again. Murphy this month blocked the Trump administration's attempt to deport people from the Philippines, Vietnam, Laos and other countries to Libya. Then, he reaffirmed his injunction on third-country deportations in response to an emergency motion from the migrants' lawyers.

 

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