Rights group calls for urgent action for 5 men deported by US and held
in Eswatini without charges
[September 20, 2025]
By GERALD IMRAY
CAPE TOWN, South Africa (AP) — International rights group Amnesty
International called Friday for urgent action from authorities in the
African nation of Eswatini to give five men deported there by the United
States access to lawyers and explain why they've been held in a
maximum-security prison for two months without charges.
Amnesty said it is raising the cases of the men from Jamaica, Cuba,
Laos, Vietnam and Yemen, who in mid-July were sent to the southern
African nation with a reputation for rights abuses, as part of the Trump
administration's third-country deportation program.
The U.S. has said it also wants to deport Kilmar Abrego Garcia to
Eswatini. His wrongful deportation to his native El Salvador has become
a flashpoint in the administration's immigration crackdown.
Lawyers for the five men sent to Eswatini said they are being held at
the Matsapha Correctional Centre, a maximum-security prison. Eswatini
authorities have declined to say where they are, citing security
reasons.
“The Eswatini authorities must officially disclose the five men’s
whereabouts, immediately grant them regular and confidential access to
their lawyers, and provide legal grounds for their detention,” Amnesty
said.

The U.S. Department of Homeland Security said the five were all serious
criminals who had been convicted of offenses including murder and child
rape, and had all been in the U.S. illegally and had deportation orders.
Their lawyers say they had served their criminal sentences in the U.S.
before being sent to Eswatini to be held in a prison without charges.
The men are being represented by three separate U.S.-based lawyers.
The U.S. has sent deportees to at least four African countries since
July under President Donald Trump's hard-line approach to immigration,
including South Sudan, Eswatini, Rwanda and Ghana. It has an agreement
to deport migrants to another nation, Uganda, although no deportations
there have been announced.
The Trump administration’s deportation program has faced accusations
that it is sending deportees to third countries where they have no ties
and where they are likely to be denied due process. Homeland Security
has said the U.S. is “using every tool available to get criminal illegal
aliens out of American communities and out of our country.”
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The Matsapha Correctional Complex is seen in Matsapha, near Mbabane,
Eswatini, on Thursday, July 17, 2025. (AP Photo/File)

Eleven West Africans deported this month from the U.S. to Ghana are
suing the Ghanaian government, alleging they were illegally detained
at a military camp, according to court documents seen Thursday by
The Associated Press.
The Ghanaian government said that a total of 14 deportees who
arrived on its territory had all been sent to their home countries,
but lawyers for the deportees disputed that and said 11 are being
held in terrible conditions at the military camp. Homeland Security
said “many” of those deportees sent to Ghana had criminal records.
U.S. authorities have directed questions over the treatment of
migrants deported to Africa to African authorities. Homeland
Security has said previously that questions on conditions in
Eswatini should be referred to the Eswatini government.
Eswatini's government spokesperson declined to comment Friday. When
the men arrived two months ago, Eswatini’s government said they were
in transit and would be sent to their home countries.
A court case in Eswatini challenging authorities over the deportees
being denied access to lawyers has been repeatedly delayed. A
separate case by Eswatini advocacy groups accusing authorities of
illegally detaining the five men has also been filed and a hearing
is scheduled next week.
Eswatini is one of the world's last absolute monarchies. King Mswati
III rules supreme and political parties are effectively banned.
Authorities are accused of repressing pro-democracy movements to
protect Mswati's position.
Authorities in South Sudan and Rwanda, two other countries accused
of having repressive governments, have also declined to give details
on where deportees sent there by the U.S. are being held. This
month, South Sudan repatriated one of the deportees, a Mexican man,
after he was held in South Sudan for two months.
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