Guantánamo, Trump Administration
Flights that left from Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, Thursday transported nearly 200 illegal immigrants detained on the island back to Venezuela.
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Nearly 200 Venezuelan migrants are flown home from Guantanamo Bay, with a layover in HondurasCARACAS, Venezuela (AP) — Nearly 200 Venezuelan immigrants to the U.S. were returned to their home country after being detained at Guantanamo Bay, in a flurry of flights that forged an unprecedented pathway for U.S. deportations. U.S. and Venezuelan ...
Many of the migrants were being kept in a detention facility that has historically held suspected terrorists. They were flown back to Venezuela Thursday after a stop in Honduras.
US and Venezuelan officials confirmed that 177 Venezuelans boarded an aircraft from the Venezuelan-owned airline Conviasa bound for Caracas.
Durán Arapé recalled. He said ICE agents told him, "You are going to Venezuela." What followed surprised Durán Arapé: he, along with more than 170 Venezuelan men, were flown to Guantánamo Bay, Cuba naval base for two weeks. NPR spoke to two immigrants ...
Immigration and Customs Enforcement transported 177 migrants from Guantanamo Bay to Honduras for final removal to Venezuela, according to a post on X from the agency.
Civil rights attorneys sued the Trump administration Saturday to prevent it from transferring 10 migrants detained in the U.S. to Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, and filed statements from men held there who ...
Venezuela’s Interior Minister Diosdado ... that more immigrant transfer flights arrived in Guantanamo Bay on Thursday. According to Cartwright, the flights originated from Texas and Louisiana.
Noncitizens in US custody are challenging the Trump administration’s bid to detain them in Guantanamo Bay, which they say is illegal because the military base is in Cuba.
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