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After a deportation flight with eight migrants, which was intended for the South Sudan this week this week, a federal judge decided on Wednesday that the Trump government had violated an earlier order.

Brian Murphy, district court judge Brian Murphy in Massachusetts, said during a hearing that the Trump government did not comply with his injunction in March to prevent individuals from being sent to another country without giving them the opportunity to fulfill or torture.

The judge was made after the Ministry of Homeland Security confirmed during a press conference on Wednesday morning that eight people from Myanmar, Laos, Vietnam, Cuba, Mexico and South Sudan were deported this week. According to the DHS, many of these people had violent criminal convictions, including murder and sexual assault.

“The measures of the department,” said Murphy, “undoubtedly violated the order of this court against the order of this court.”

Upper row: Jose Manuel Rodriguez-Quinones, Enrique Arias-Hierro, Jesus Munoz-Gutierrez, Thongxay Nilakout. Lower row: Dian Peter Domach, Kyaw Mya; Nyo Myint, Tuan Thanh Phan.Dhs

A travel consultant from the Ministry of Foreign Affairs warns the Americans not to go to South Sudan.

Prosecutors said that migrants are still in ice custody and that the plane has ended up. They refused to share the location of the final target of the aircraft.

Murphy, who passed on the sequence of events that led to the deportation of these people after spending more than 30 minutes in a sealed procedure, said that the people were informed about their destination on Monday, outside of business hours. He added that the next morning you finally left the ice cream

Without sufficient time to consult a lawyer or family members, the judge said that it was “impossible” for these people to “have a sensible opportunity to rose against their deportation to a third country.

The hearing comes after the immigration lawyers Murphy announced that at least two of their customers from Myanmar and Vietnam were allegedly deported to South Sudan on Tuesday morning.

It is possible that one of the migrants, Nyo Mint, could have been redirected to his home country Burma, but his immigration lawyer Jonathan Ryan says in San Antonio says that he is still in the dark about where his client is and says he was “disappeared”.

“I didn't hear from my customer,” said Ryan. “How should I take your word that you sent him to Burma?”

Ryan says that the government acts as if a proper procedure is a privilege that it is a problem “if we stop doing a proper procedure for unpopular people”.

During a DHS press conference before the hearing, spokesman Tricia McLaughlin said reporters from the migrants: “No country on Earth wants to accept them because their crimes are so uniquely barbaric.

McLaughhlin also criticized the court system.

“Active judges are on the other hand and fight to bring them back to the floor of the United States,” she said.

The South Sudan could deal with another civil war. A power sharing agreement between 2018 between President Salva Kiir and Vice President Riek Machar ended five years of civil war. But at the beginning of this year, violent clashes between the political groups increased again.

At the beginning of this month, Murphy blocked the Trump government's attempt to deport individuals from countries such as the Philippines, Vietnam and Laos to Libya. Then Murphy had confirmed his injunction about the deportations of third country in response to an emergency application for the lawyers of the migrants.

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