According to immigration lawyers, Donald Trump's administration is working to increase meaningless cruelty to immigrants and has apparently been planning to send Asian immigrants to Libya.
The plan to deport immigrants to Libya is a war-hardened country known for its widespread abuse of immigrants, representing not only possible human rights violations, but also another act of contempt for the federal judiciary.
Last month, a federal judge in Massachusetts issued an injunction unless the Trump administration deports any non-citizens to a third country (a country that is not its country of origin) without proper procedures and without giving them a meaningful opportunity to prove that they are afraid of being persecuted there, torture, torture, murder if they are sent there.
Judge Brian Murphy, who issued the ban, quickly issued an order on Wednesday, clarifying: "As reported by the news agency, as reported by the news agency, the alleged upcoming dismissal, the plaintiffs attempting to confirm the accounts and public information of the class members, apparently violated the court's order."
The New York Times The Trump administration is planning to use military aircraft to fly immigrants to Libya by Wednesday, reported Tuesday. When Trump was asked Wednesday whether he planned to send immigrants to Libya, he replied: "I don't know, you have to ask about homeland security."
Attorneys for the National Immigration Litigation Alliance, Northwest Immigration Rights Program and Human Rights first filed an emergency motion in Murphy on Wednesday.
Lawyers warn that “Laos, Vietnam and the Philippines” immigrants were detained by Texas Immigration and Customs Enforcement Detention (ICE) and “prepare to repatriate counties that are notorious for human rights violations, especially those that are notorious for immigrant residents.” They say that immigrants have not received the required notice or have the opportunity to apply for protection under the Convention against Torture.
"Libya has a long record of human rights violations," the lawyer wrote. "Any class member who has been moved to Libya faces a strong possibility of imprisonment, followed by torture, or even disappearance or death."
As the exhibition included emails from immigration attorneys for Orange County, California. It said: "What we heard from relatives is that yesterday, ice officials from the South Texas detention center gathered 1 Vietnamese detainee, and five others (including one from Laos) entered a room and told them that they needed to sign a document agreeing to be deported to Libya. When all of them refused, they were placed in a separate room and ordered in the claim to be named orders, so that they could be named orders.
Another exhibition includes an email statement from lawyers in the asylum defense program. A Lao man at the South Texas ice processing center "could be sent to Libya or Saudi Arabia." She went there to meet with immigrants there, "but they have been moved out," her colleague wrote.
The Trump administration has deported hundreds of Venezuelan immigrants from the notorious large prison in El Salvador, despite no due process and even though federal judges are not allowed to order, claiming that no one can force the administration to bring them back. Trump and his officials in particular refused to bring back Kilmar Abrego Garcia, a Maryland man illegally deported to Central American nation, even if the Supreme Court issued a unanimous 9-0 decision, ordering it to "promote" his return.
El Salvador's prison system is known for torture and ill-treatment, and its judicial system is actually a "black hole", such as Rolling stones Reported. But immigrants shipped to Libya will be a new low.
The U.S. State Department’s annual report on human rights practices in Libya for 2023 also found that among other things, “credible reports: arbitrary or illegal homicides, including extrajudicial killings, homicides; persons who suffered torture or cruel, inhumane, or derogatory treatment or punishment or serious detention, persons who were detained or life imprisonment; judicial institutions; crimes against family members, allegedly charged, including widespread civilian death or injury.”
The report draws a more terrifying picture of immigrants and refugees.
“Immigrants, refugees and other foreign nationals are particularly prone to kidnapping,” the report said. “These individuals remain vulnerable to epilepsy seizures in armed groups engaged in human trafficking or immigration smuggling.”
Elsewhere, the report said: “Unknown numbers of people including refugees, asylum seekers and other immigrants, including refugees, asylum seekers and other immigrants under the control of armed groups.”
It continued: “Criminal and African armed groups, controlling external facilities, often tortured and ill-treated detainees, subject to arbitrary homicide, rape and sexual violence, assault and sexual violence, assault and sexual violence, electric shock, burns, forced labor, labor, deprivation of food and water, according to dozens of campaigns ongoing with international aid agencies and human rights, the purpose is shared among many involved domestic aid agencies.”
The New York Times Both Libya's rival governments deny agreeing to accept any deals for U.S. deportation