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Eight migrants deported from Djibouti to South Sudan, Homeland Security says

Washington/Nairobi (Reuters) -Trump administration was deported to South Sudan, which has been held by the United States for more than a month at a military base in Djibouti.

Two officials working at Juba Airport said that a plane carrying US exiles came to South Sudan on Saturday.

Speaking about the condition of anonymity, an airport staff said that the plane saw a document showing that “this morning came at 6:00 am” (0400 GMT). An immigrant official said that deported meaticians came to the country, but he did not share more details by directing all questions to the National Security Service Intelligence Agency.

Previously, a government source of government from a South Sudan said that US officials were at the airport waiting for the arrival of immigrants.

The fate of the immigrants had become a glare point in the war that the immigrants said that the immigrants said twice that the immigrants said that the immigrants said twice to the lower courts on the legitimacy of the campaign of immigration by the high -profile deportation of the Trump administration.

South Sudan has been dangerous for a long time for local residents. The US State Department advises citizens not to travel there because of violent crime and armed conflict. The United Nations said that the political crisis of the African country could revive a brutal civil war that ended in 2018.

According to their lawyers, eight men from Cuba, Laos, Mexico, Myanmar, Sudan and Vietnam argued that their exiles to South Sudan would violate the US constitution, which banned the brutal and unusual punishment.

In May, a federal judge in Boston has been detained in Djibouti since the Trump administration immediately prevented the movement of process concerns to South Sudan.

Following additional cases, the Supreme Court lifted these borders on Thursday and headed to the administration.

The two courts evaluated the demands of immigrants’ lawyers in case of emergency on Friday, where the courts were closed for the 4th of July Independence Day holiday, but ultimately the US Regional Judge Brian Murphy in Boston said that the Supreme Court order required to reject their proposals by cleaning their way because they were deported.

After they arrived, the place of men in South Sudan was immediately unknown.

(Reporting by Nairobi Bureau; Additional reporting by Ryan Patrick Jones in Toronto and Bedminster, New Jersey and Andrea Shallal;

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