Immigration

Colombia cancels US deportation flights and blasts mistreatment of migrants


Colombia has suspended US deportation flights returning citizens detained at the Mexico border, because of cruel and degrading treatment by US migration officials and last-minute flight cancellations.

Fernando García, head of Colombia’s migration agency, blasted cruel and degrading treatment that some migrants were subjected to before boarding and during the flights, including use of cuffs for hands and feet.

“There are recurring complaints about the poor conditions in detention centers and mistreatment during flights, which represented a determining factor in the decisions adopted in the last few hours,” Garcia said in a statement.

The number of Colombians trying to migrate north to the US has soared in recent years, with more than 125,000 apprehended at the United States’ southern border in 2022, according US Customs and Borders Protection (CBP), up from around 6,200 in 2021.

Colombia expected to receive some 1,200 migrants in flights programmed to arrive from the US during the first week of May, the country’s migration agency said in a statement. The pilot plan called “mom returns” was intended to send mostly women, children and adolescents back to Colombia.

Under the plan, expulsion flights to Colombia were to rise to around 20 per month according to Colombian authorities, following a push by US immigration officials to ramp up expulsions of migrants from the southern border before Covid-19 restrictions are lifted.

The plan was suspended after flights programmed for 1 May and 2 May were canceled, Colombia’s migration agency said.

“Before the arrival of the scheduled flights … both were canceled by the North American immigration agencies,” García said in the statement.

Read More   Mexico: fatal fire spreads through Ciudad Juárez immigration detention centre – video

A US official said the pause was limited to flights carrying families.

Colombia’s migration agency did not immediately confirm whether flights carrying other migrants would go ahead.

The US embassy in Bogotá declined to comment on the matter.

US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (Ice) did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

The lifting of the Covid restrictions, known as Title 42, which allows US authorities to expel migrants to Mexico without the chance to seek asylum, is due to take place on 11 May.



READ SOURCE

This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this site, you accept our use of cookies.