Congo in talks with US over third-country deportations, sources say
A view shows buildings behind a street of the Gombe area, ahead of the announcement of provisional results of the December presidential election, in Kinshasa, Democratic Republic of Congo, December 30, 2023. REUTERS/Justin Makangara/File Photo
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The Democratic Republic of Congo is in talks with the Trump
administration about receiving deportees from other countries, two government
sources in Kinshasa told Reuters, in what would be the latest of several such
agreements reached in Africa.
The discussions, also described by three U.N. sources and
two diplomats briefed by U.S. officials, underscore Washington's growing
reliance on so-called third-country deportations to speed up removals of
migrants who entered or remain in the United States without authorisation.
The arrangements are often negotiated quietly, with limited public detail on their scope or
terms.
The talks with Congo are coinciding with an effort by the
Trump administration to implement a peace deal between Congo and Rwanda and an
agreement ensuring U.S. access to Congolese critical minerals.
The United States has sent third-country deportees to
African countries, including Ghana, Cameroon, Equatorial Guinea
and Eswatini, drawing criticism from legal experts and rights groups over
the legal basis for the transfers and the treatment of deportees sent to
countries where they are not nationals.
Some of the migrants have been forced home despite receiving
court-ordered protection in the U.S. meant to prevent that from happening.
The talks with Congo have not yet resulted in an agreement
and key details remain unresolved, the Congolese sources said. It is not yet
known when the first deportation flights might take place, how many migrants could be involved
or their nationalities.
It is also unclear what Congo, if anything, would receive in
return for accepting deportees.
A source at the U.N.'s International Organisation for
Migration familiar with the discussions
told Reuters the plan could involve migrants from South America, including
Venezuelans.
A State Department spokesperson said Washington had "no
comment on the details of our diplomatic communications with other governments."
A spokesperson for Congo's presidency did not immediately
respond to a request for comment.

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