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Trump civil servants 'illegally deported' Vietnamese and Burmanic migrants to South Sudan | Trump Administration

Proponents of the immigrant rights have accused the Trump administration of deporting a dozen migrants from countries such as Myanmar and Vietnam to South Sudan and asked a judge to order his return.

The lawyers of the migrants made a registration in court on Tuesday, which was aimed at the US district judge Brian Murphy, who had amazed the Trump administration to delay migrants in other countries as their own without hearing any concerns that they could be tortured or persecuted if they were sent there.

They said they learned that on Tuesday morning almost a dozen migrants were flown to South Sudan in a detention center in Texas.

These migrants included a person from Myanmar, who was identified by the initials NM in court documents, whose lawyer received an e -mail from an official from the US immigration and customs authority on Monday who informed the lawyer about the intention of depriving his client in South Sudan.

According to court documents, NM refused – the “only limited knowledge of English”, the announcement about the distance that was only made available to him in English, in violation of an earlier court decision.

The migrant's lawyers said that she learned that her client had been flown to South Sudan on Tuesday morning.

The spouse of a Vietnamese man who was recorded in the same internment camp in Texas sent his lawyer by e -mail, said he and 10 other people were also deported according to the application.

The lawyers asked the judge for an emergency court decision to prevent the distance from without the opportunity to go to court.

“In such a situation, as the Supreme Court recognized in the past few weeks, the return is immediately reasonable – and necessary – in relation to the case of Kilmar Ábrego García, the Maryland -Man, who was wrongly deported to El Salvador.

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The Department of Homeland Security did not immediately answer a request for comments.

The South Sudan, the youngest country in the world, gained independence from Sudan in 2011 and has been struggling with armed conflicts and poverty ever since. Between 2013 and 2018, the factions, which are the current President Salva Kiir Mayardit Loyal, and his Vice President Riek Machar fought almost 400,000 people.

The US State Department recommends traveling “after crime, kidnapping and armed conflicts”.

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