US deports eight people 'of African origin' to Uganda
Eight people from different African countries have been
deported to Uganda from the United States, the first such transfer under a
migration deal signed last year.
The group arrived on Wednesday after a US judge approved their cases,
Uganda's foreign ministry said.
The ministry said in a statement that its deal with the
US designated Uganda as a safe third country for migrants who cannot return to
their countries, for reasons such as persecution.
The Uganda Law Society has condemned the deportations, saying the
individuals had effectively been dumped in the country "through an
undignified, harrowing and dehumanising process".
The organisation called the process illegal and said it
would challenge it in court.
The BBC has asked the US Department of Homeland Security for comment.
US President Donald Trump's administration has deported dozens of
people to third countries since coming into power last January - part of its hard-line
approach towards immigration.
Uganda's foreign ministry said it could not give many
details about the deportees for privacy reasons, but said: "Uganda
continues to uphold its longstanding commitment to providing sanctuary to
persons in need and assuring they are treated with dignity."
It said they were neither Ugandan nor US citizens but were "of
African origin who may not be granted asylum in the USA and are reluctant to or
may have concerns about returning to their country of origin".
The BBC's US partner CBS News reports that Uganda agreed to accept
deported migrants as long as they did not have criminal histories.
Source: BBC/By Wedaeli Chibelushi

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