Trump strikes deals with Honduras and Uganda

According to the BBC’s documents obtained by US partner CBS, the US has reached a bilateral deportation agreements with Honduras and Uganda as part of its pressure on illegal immigration.
Uganda agreed to buy an indefinite number of African and Asian immigrants requesting asylum on the US-Mexican border, and said that Honduras would take a few hundred deported people from Spanish-speaking countries.
The movement is part of Donald Trump’s administration’s attempt to accept immigrants who are not deported to more countries’ own citizens.
Human Rights Campaigns condemned the policy by saying that it was at risk of sending immigrants to countries where they could be damaged.
Under the agreement, Uganda agreed to accept the deported immigrants unless they had criminal backgrounds, but according to the CBS, it is not clear how many of the country will take.
Honduras agreed to buy immigrants for two years, including families traveling with children, but argues that he could decide to accept more documents.
Both agreements are part of a wider edition for the deportation regulations of the Trump administration, including those who have controversial human rights records.
So far, at least one dozen countries agreed to accept immigrants from other countries.
Last week, the US State Department announced that it signed a “safe third country” agreement with Paraguay to “share the burden of illegal migration”.
The White House is also actively establishing several African countries, and Rwanda says that at the beginning of this month it will receive about 250 immigrants from the United States.
In a state of a state spokesman BBC, a situation of the agreement states that Rwanda will “have the ability to confirm each individual proposed for the re -settlement”.
Rwanda was criticized for the registration of human rights, including the risk of deportation to the countries where those who were previously sent to the East African nation would face danger.
Earlier this year, Panama and Costa Rica agreed to buy several hundred African and Asian immigrants from the United States.
The CBS shows that government documents are approaching countries such as Ecuador and Spain to get deported immigrants of Trump administration.
Since the beginning of the second period, Trump has begun comprehensive efforts to eliminate undocumented immigrants – an important election promise that attracts mass support during this campaign.
In June, the US Supreme Court cleared the way Trump continued to deport to countries other than homeland without giving the chance to increase the risks that immigrants may face.
At that time, Justice Sonia Sotomayor, Elena Kagan and Ketanji Brown Jackson opposed the majority decision and described the decision as a “gross abuse”.
UN Rights Experts and Human Rights Groups argued that these inferences may violate international law to a nation that has no origin of immigrants.




