US completes deportation of eight men to South Sudan after legal wrangling | US immigration

Eight men who were deported from the United States in May and were held under guard for weeks at an American military base in the African state in Djibouti, while their legal challenges in the court reached the intended destination of the Trump administration, which was torn by the war. South SudanIt is a country that advises the Ministry of Foreign Affairs not to travel to “crime, kidnapping and armed conflict.”
Men from Cuba, Laos, Mexico, Myanmar, Vietnam and South Sudan arrived in South Sudan on Friday after a federal judge wiped the way for the Trump administration to transfer them in a case that went to the Supreme Court, which allowed it to be removed from the United States. Administration officials said men were convicted of violent crimes in the United States.
“This was a victory for the rule of law, safety and security of the American people,” Tricia McLeulin, a spokeswoman for the Internal Security, said in a statement on Saturday.
The Supreme Court wiped the road to transport men last Thursday.
The men were placed on a trip in May to South Sudan, but it was converted into a base in Djibouti, where they were held in a converted shipping container. The journey was transferred after a federal judge found that the administration had violated his matter by failing to allow men with an opportunity to challenge the removal.
The majority of the conservative Supreme Court ruled in June that immigration officials can quickly deport people to the third countries. The majority stopped an order that allowed migrants to challenge any removal of countries outside their homeland as they could be in danger.
A wave of hearing in the court on July 4 resulted in a temporary contract regarding the deportation while the judge evaluated a final appeal, before the judge decided that he was unwilling to stop the removal operations and that the best person in his position is Boston’s judge whose rulings led to the initial stopping of the administration’s effort to start the deportation to southern Sudan.
By Friday evening, this judge issued a brief ruling and concluded that the Supreme Court had linked his hands.
The American authorities have reached agreements with other countries to accommodate immigrants who cannot quickly send them to their homelands.