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Uganda joins Trump’s deportation push, becoming latest country to accept US migrants

The ‘temporary arrangement’ is for individuals who do not qualify for asylum in the US but cannot return home.

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US Northern Command and Transportation Command assist ICE with deportation flights at Fort Bliss, Texas in February. Photo: Sergeant Walker Pino/US Department of Defence/AFP

Uganda has agreed to receive migrants who do not qualify to remain in the United States, a foreign ministry official said on Thursday, in Washington’s latest attempt to speed up deportations.

US President Donald Trump’s administration has negotiated arrangements to send people to third countries, among them El Salvador and eSwatini, which have been fiercely criticised by rights groups.

At roughly 1.7 million, Uganda already hosts the largest refugee population in Africa, according to the United Nations, and is the latest east African country to announce such a deal with Washington, joining Rwanda and South Sudan.

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“The agreement is in respect of Third Country Nationals who may not be granted asylum in the United States, but are reluctant to or may have concerns about returning to their countries of origin,” the Ugandan foreign affairs ministry’s permanent secretary, Vincent Bagiire, said in a statement on social media.

He said it was a “temporary arrangement”, which stated “individuals with criminal records and unaccompanied minors will not be accepted”.

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Bagiire also stated Uganda’s preference that “individuals from African countries shall be the ones transferred to Uganda”.

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