The Prague Post - 'Jail or death': migrants expelled by Trump fear for their fate

EUR -
AED 4.142717
AFN 80.648038
ALL 98.194057
AMD 440.090987
ANG 2.032753
AOA 1033.131218
ARS 1323.750514
AUD 1.769476
AWG 2.03299
AZN 1.913677
BAM 1.947353
BBD 2.284212
BDT 137.453757
BGN 1.947114
BHD 0.425174
BIF 3311.433808
BMD 1.127873
BND 1.478075
BOB 7.817091
BRL 6.399207
BSD 1.131303
BTN 95.606282
BWP 15.486685
BYN 3.702273
BYR 22106.301988
BZD 2.272463
CAD 1.563181
CDF 3240.378119
CHF 0.938238
CLF 0.027849
CLP 1068.704271
CNY 8.201156
CNH 8.210568
COP 4773.179191
CRC 571.416262
CUC 1.127873
CUP 29.888623
CVE 109.788762
CZK 24.914503
DJF 200.445266
DKK 7.462648
DOP 66.580598
DZD 149.609701
EGP 57.578912
ERN 16.918088
ETB 151.81937
FJD 2.548372
FKP 0.845524
GBP 0.850286
GEL 3.095958
GGP 0.845524
GHS 16.121071
GIP 0.845524
GMD 80.669215
GNF 9798.409895
GTQ 8.712208
GYD 237.400213
HKD 8.749189
HNL 29.357524
HRK 7.53303
HTG 147.791055
HUF 404.192271
IDR 18754.941492
ILS 4.079758
IMP 0.845524
INR 95.524103
IQD 1481.729559
IRR 47497.524842
ISK 145.709765
JEP 0.845524
JMD 179.092345
JOD 0.799887
JPY 164.236854
KES 146.442645
KGS 98.632862
KHR 4528.117193
KMF 490.058661
KPW 1015.098132
KRW 1620.471208
KWD 0.345695
KYD 0.942656
KZT 580.456903
LAK 24459.118874
LBP 101364.702151
LKR 338.654
LRD 226.258543
LSL 21.06531
LTL 3.330314
LVL 0.682239
LYD 6.175268
MAD 10.492053
MDL 19.418937
MGA 5023.210478
MKD 61.269228
MMK 2368.011492
MNT 4031.459094
MOP 9.037415
MRU 44.855381
MUR 50.844607
MVR 17.380708
MWK 1961.690641
MXN 22.116588
MYR 4.866204
MZN 72.183568
NAD 21.061685
NGN 1812.096391
NIO 41.629054
NOK 11.792471
NPR 152.97045
NZD 1.911762
OMR 0.43422
PAB 1.131293
PEN 4.147907
PGK 4.618923
PHP 63.027753
PKR 317.864975
PLN 4.282025
PYG 9060.776786
QAR 4.123314
RON 4.977979
RSD 116.674754
RUB 92.663766
RWF 1625.143301
SAR 4.229964
SBD 9.430478
SCR 16.106391
SDG 677.290439
SEK 11.012559
SGD 1.479977
SHP 0.886331
SLE 25.7042
SLL 23650.905131
SOS 646.492798
SRD 41.558727
STD 23344.684628
SVC 9.897444
SYP 14665.028078
SZL 21.046704
THB 37.908064
TJS 11.923777
TMT 3.947554
TND 3.359925
TOP 2.641587
TRY 43.37804
TTD 7.661509
TWD 36.231799
TZS 3027.302429
UAH 46.93069
UGX 4144.024184
USD 1.127873
UYU 47.603507
UZS 14629.142617
VES 97.829375
VND 29330.325673
VUV 136.004036
WST 3.127882
XAF 653.121017
XAG 0.034938
XAU 0.000351
XCD 3.048132
XDR 0.812269
XOF 653.129666
XPF 119.331742
YER 276.272204
ZAR 20.948975
ZMK 10152.208385
ZMW 31.478732
ZWL 363.174501
  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    63

    0%

  • SCS

    0.0050

    9.925

    +0.05%

  • RYCEF

    0.2000

    10.2

    +1.96%

  • CMSC

    -0.0300

    21.98

    -0.14%

  • BTI

    -0.2150

    43.335

    -0.5%

  • NGG

    -1.2500

    71.75

    -1.74%

  • GSK

    -0.7850

    39.065

    -2.01%

  • BP

    0.4390

    27.899

    +1.57%

  • BCC

    -0.8300

    92.45

    -0.9%

  • RELX

    -0.3850

    54.245

    -0.71%

  • RIO

    -0.4900

    58.91

    -0.83%

  • BCE

    -0.5750

    21.675

    -2.65%

  • JRI

    0.0770

    12.987

    +0.59%

  • CMSD

    0.0100

    22.31

    +0.04%

  • VOD

    0.0000

    9.76

    0%

  • AZN

    -1.1900

    70.6

    -1.69%

'Jail or death': migrants expelled by Trump fear for their fate
'Jail or death': migrants expelled by Trump fear for their fate / Photo: Ezequiel BECERRA - AFP

'Jail or death': migrants expelled by Trump fear for their fate

Marwa fled Taliban rule in Afghanistan because she wanted to study, work, wear jeans and go to the park without a male chaperone.

Text size:

Now she is under lock and key in Costa Rica, along with hundreds of other migrants expelled by the United States to third countries in Central America.

Costa Rica is one of three Central American countries, along with Panama and Guatemala, that have agreed to receive migrants from other countries and to detain them until they are sent to their home nations or other host countries.

A fourth country -- El Salvador -- took a group of Venezuelans and jailed them in a maximum-security prison after the United States claimed, without providing evidence, that they are gang members.

AFP spoke to several migrants from a group of about 200 people, including around 80 children, detained at a facility near Costa Rica's border with Panama.

All said they feared for their lives in their homeland.

Marwa, 27, said she was terrified at the thought that she, her husband and two-year-old daughter could be sent back to Afghanistan.

Her husband Mohammad Asadi, 31, who ran a construction company back home, was threatened by the Taliban for selling materials to American companies.

"I know if I go back I will die there. I will be killed by the Taliban," Marwa told AFP in English, in an interview conducted through the center's perimeter fence.

Alireza Salimivir, a 35-year-old Iranian Christian, said he and his wife face a similar fate.

"Due to our conversion from Islam to Christianity... it's jail or the death penalty for us," he said.

- Tropical limbo -

On his return to office in January, US President Donald Trump launched what he vowed would be the biggest migrant deportation wave in American history and signed an order suspending asylum claims at the southern border.

Citing pressure from "our economically powerful brother to the north," Costa Rica said it had agreed to collaborate in the "repatriation of 200 illegal immigrants to their country."

But only 74 of the migrants have been repatriated so far, with another 10 set to follow, according to the authorities.

The rest are in limbo.

They refuse to be deported to their homelands, but no other country -- including Costa Rica itself, which has a long tradition of offering asylum -- has offered to take them in.

"We can't go back, nor can we stay here. We don't know the culture and don't speak Spanish," said Marwa, who said she wanted to be close to relatives "in Canada, the United States or Europe."

- Prison or war -

German Smirnov, a 36-year-old Russian former election official, said he fled to the United States with his wife and six-year-old son after flagging up fraud in last year's presidential election.

He said his request for asylum in the United States was "totally ignored, like it had never existed."

If returned to Vladimir Putin's Russia, he said: "They will give me two options, sit in prison or go to war (in Ukraine)."

Marwa and her husband also said they wanted to seek asylum in the United States when they arrived at the US-Mexican border earlier this year after a grueling overland journey through 10 countries, starting in Brazil.

But they were never given the chance to file an asylum claim. Instead, they were detained and flown to Costa Rica 18 days later.

Asadi said an immigration official verbally abused Marwa for wearing a hijab and singled her out to pick up trash, alone.

Smirnov said they treated the migrants, including women and children, "like scum."

- Costa Rica policy change -

At the Costa Rican facility, the group said they were well fed and allowed to use their cell phones, but their passports had been seized by the police.

"There is a systematic pattern of human rights violations in a country that has always prided itself on defending them," said former Costa Rican diplomat Mauricio Herrera, who has filed a legal challenge to the migrants' detention.

"This is a very serious setback for Costa Rica," he told AFP.

Michael Garcia Bochenek, children's rights counsel at Human Rights Watch, warned Costa Rica in a statement against being "complicit in flagrant US abuses."

Q.Fiala--TPP