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Men freed from El Salvador mega-prison endured ‘state-sanctioned torture’, lawyers say | US immigration

The Venezuelalali, who Trump administration thrown into the most famous megaprison by El Salvador, endured “state -approved torture” as the lawyers emerged about the fears they faced during the capacity.

José Manuel Ramos Bastidas, one of the 252 Venezuelas, the US’s most famous mega-pilo, sent to El Tocuyo on Tuesday, when he returned to El Tocuyo on Tuesday.

His wife, son and mother were wearing bright blue shirts they had written with a photo, posing in a yellow and black moto jacket and kamo-white jeans. They hugged him for the first time since he left Venezuela last year. And in March they could have been alive and good for the first time since he disappeared to Centro de Confinamiento del Terrorismo (CECOT).

Ramos Bastias’s partner Roynerliz Rodríguez said, “We have been waiting for this moment for months and I feel that I can breathe in the end.” “This has been a nightmare that lived in recent months, he doesn’t know anything about José Manuel and he just dreams of what he should suffer.

Venezuela exiles were sent back after the agreement between the US and Venezuela governments last week. Venezuela President Nicolás Maduro negotiated a prisoner who released 10 American citizens and dozens of Venezuela political prisoner in order to release his citizens from CECOT.

This week, after doing medical and background checks, they finally come together with their families. The statements of their experiences in Cecot offer the first, most detailed paintings of the conditions within the CECOT, which is a mega-pussies that human rights groups say they are designed to lose people.

Ramos Bastias and other US exiles were told to spend 30 to 90 years at CECOT unless the US President gave orders otherwise. On Friday, they were shot with rubber bullets in the last days they were detained.

During the interviews with the media and the statements provided to their lawyers, the other prisoners identified long beating and humiliation of the guards. After some prisoners tried to break the locks in their cells, prisoners were beaten for six consecutive days, Atlantic reports. Male guards, naked prisoners defeated and recorded the videos reportedly brought female colleagues.

Attorney Guardian told Edicson David Quintero Chacón, a lot of the US, said he had been isolated over time and thought he would die. Quintero Chacón, who had scars from daily beating, said that he and other prisoners were given the opportunity to wash only soaps and visitors in the days when the visitors visited the prison – forced them to choose between hygiene and the humiliation of the people.

Food was limited and drinking water was polluted, Quintero Chacón and other prisoners. The lights were all night, so the prisoners could never be fully listened to. Stephanie M Alvarez-Jones, the lawyer of the Southeast Regional Lawyer of the National Immigration Project, said, “The guards would come at night and defeat at night.”

Alvarez-Jones wrote the following in a file that wanted to reject his petition for months in order to release his customers: “Probably all this will have the psychological impact of torture. The courts should never look at such states. “

Ramos Bastias has never been convicted of any crime in the United States (or in any country). In fact, he never set foot in the United States as a free man.

In El Tocuyo, he had been working in Lara’s Venezuela province and since he was a young man to support his family. Last year, he decided to leave his country, which had not yet survived an economic collapse for a better income quest, so that he could pay for medical care with severe asthma.

In March 2024, he came to the US-Mexico border and presented himself to an entrance port. In order to apply for asylum, he made an appointment using the CBP One phone application, which is currently destroyed, and the immigration officials and a judge did not qualify.

However, the customs and border protection agents marked Ramos Bastias as a possible member of Aragua, based on an unfounded report of Panama officials and an unfounded report of their tattoos. Thus, they transferred him to an detention facility until he was deported.

Although he agreed to return to Venezuela, he stayed in custody for months. “I think José is particularly angry for José, to accept his deportation,” he said. “He has wanted to be deported for a long time, and he just wanted to go home.”

In December, Venezuela did not agree to deport deportation – so Ramos Bastias asked him that he could not be released and could bring his own way home. A month later, Donald Trump swore as president. Everything has changed.

Ramos Bastias began to see that other Venezueans were sent to the military base in the Gulf of Guantánamo in Cuba, and he was afraid that the same thing would happen to him. On March 14, the authorities shared him with his family that he could return to Venezuela after he began to prepare him for deportation.

The next day he flew to Cecot.

“They could deport him to Venezuela, Al Alvarez-Jones, Alvarez-Jones, Alt Alvarez-Jones. “Instead, the US government decided to torture him in CECOT.”

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