Trump Wants to Deport Abrego Garcia to Uganda. Critics There Say the Murky Deal ‘Stinks’

Trump Wants to Deport Abrego Garcia to Uganda. Critics There Say the Murky Deal ‘Stinks’

The highest-profile detainee that the United States seeks to deport, Kilmar Abrego Garcia, appears to be headed to Uganda, where critics claim that a deal with the Trump administration eases political pressure on a president who’s ruled for nearly four decades.

Ugandan officials have released few details about the agreement but have said they prefer to receive deportees of African origin — and don’t want people with criminal records. Abrego Garcia is an El Salvador native who has been charged with human smuggling. He has pleaded not guilty.

Abrego Garcia, the subject of a protracted immigration saga, was detained again Monday by immigration officials in the U.S., and the Department of Homeland Security said he “is being processed for removal to Uganda.”

Other African nations already have accepted deportees. In July, the U.S. deported five men with criminal backgrounds to the southern African kingdom of Eswatini and sent eight others to South Sudan, where civil war threatens to erupt againRwanda has said it will receive up to 250 migrants deported from the U.S.

Opposition figures and others in Uganda on Tuesday questioned the lack of parliamentary approval for the agreement.

Without such oversight, “the whole scheme stinks,” said Mathias Mpuuga, until recently the leader of the opposition in Uganda’s national assembly.

He said the agreement left him “a little perplexed” because Uganda already struggles to look after refugees fleeing violence in neighboring countries like Congo and South Sudan. He suggested the agreement makes sense only as a matter of “economic expediency” for Uganda’s government.

It is unclear what Uganda’s government is receiving for accepting deportees, how many it might take or what its plans for Abrego Garcia might be. The country’s attorney-general, as well as government ministers in charge of refugees and internal affairs, were not immediately available for comment.

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