US deports 11 migrants to Ghana despite safety concerns, lawyer says

US deports 11 migrants to Ghana despite safety concerns, lawyer says
Dozens of people participate in an anti-Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) rally outside of the Brooklyn Metropolitan Detention Center on September 02, 2025, in New York City. (afp)
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Updated 23 September 2025
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US deports 11 migrants to Ghana despite safety concerns, lawyer says

US deports 11 migrants to Ghana despite safety concerns, lawyer says
  • The Trump administration’s deportation program has faced widespread criticism from human rights experts

ACCRA: Eleven West African nationals deported by the US to Ghana were sent to their home countries over the weekend despite safety concerns, their lawyer told a court in Ghana on Tuesday.
The US had deported a total of 14 West African immigrants to Ghana under controversial circumstances. Although Ghanaian authorities earlier said they have all been sent home, the deportees and their lawyers later told The Associated Press that 11 of them were still at a military facility in Ghana.
The 11 deportees sued the Ghanaian government last week, seeking their release. Eight of them had told the local court that they had legal protections from being deported to their home countries “due to the risk of torture, persecution or inhumane treatment.”
“We have to inform the court that the persons whose human rights we are seeking to enforce were all deported over the weekend,” their lawyer, Oliver Barker-Vormawo, told the court Tuesday at a virtual hearing, adding that the suit had become irrelevant.
“This is precisely the injury we were trying to prevent,” he said of the safety concerns of the deportees.
The Trump administration’s deportation program has faced widespread criticism from human rights experts who cite international protections for asylum-seekers and question whether immigrants will be appropriately screened before being deported.
The administration has been seeking ways to deter immigrants from entering the US illegally and remove those who already have done so, especially those accused of crimes and including those who cannot easily be deported to their home countries.
Faced with court decisions that migrants can’t be sent back to their home countries, the Trump administration has increasingly been trying to send them to third countries under agreements with those governments.
Ghana has joined Eswatini, Rwanda and South Sudan as African countries that have received migrants from third countries who were deported from the US


US sanctions Myanmar armed group over scams

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US sanctions Myanmar armed group over scams

US sanctions Myanmar armed group over scams
WASHINGTON: The United States announced Wednesday that it was imposing sanctions on an armed Myanmar group — alongside four of its senior leaders — accusing them of supporting cyber scam centers that target Americans.
The action took aim at the Democratic Karen Benevolent Army (DKBA), alongside companies Trans Asia and Troth Star, for their alleged roles in helping to develop these scam centers, the US Treasury Department said.
“The revenue generated by scam center workers — who are often themselves victims of human trafficking — supports organized crime and allows the DKBA to finance its harmful activities,” the Treasury added.
John Hurley, the department’s undersecretary for terrorism and financial intelligence, said that criminal networks operating out of Myanmar “are stealing billions of dollars from hardworking Americans through online scams.”
“These same networks traffic human beings and help fuel Burma’s brutal civil war,” he said in a statement, warning that the US government would continue pursuing cybercriminals.
The two firms targeted, alongside Thai national Chamu Sawang, are also linked to Chinese organized crime, the Treasury said.
The agency’s move adds to earlier actions against “illicit actors perpetrating these scams.”
In May, it designated the Karen National Army as a transnational criminal organization, alongside its leader and his two sons for their “roles in facilitating human trafficking and cyber scams that harm US citizens.”
In October, the Treasury — with UK counterparts — sanctioned a Cambodian business conglomerate called the Prince Group that operates scam centers, it added.
A US government estimate noted that Americans lost at least $10 billion in 2024 to Southeast Asia-based scam operations. This marked a 66-percent rise over the prior year.