The Prague Post - 'Like human trafficking': how the US deported five men to Eswatini

EUR -
AED 4.247651
AFN 77.485181
ALL 96.73653
AMD 442.501157
ANG 2.070798
AOA 1060.611258
ARS 1644.099052
AUD 1.764578
AWG 2.08479
AZN 1.944326
BAM 1.954922
BBD 2.329753
BDT 140.8667
BGN 1.954313
BHD 0.436053
BIF 3439.154574
BMD 1.15661
BND 1.501825
BOB 8.0104
BRL 6.202436
BSD 1.15668
BTN 102.556915
BWP 16.420621
BYN 3.936431
BYR 22669.561159
BZD 2.326355
CAD 1.621371
CDF 2767.187251
CHF 0.932384
CLF 0.027994
CLP 1098.248098
CNY 8.244898
CNH 8.242311
COP 4507.29863
CRC 581.538679
CUC 1.15661
CUP 30.650172
CVE 110.215473
CZK 24.29992
DJF 205.977442
DKK 7.467035
DOP 72.937225
DZD 150.690748
EGP 55.013021
ERN 17.349154
ETB 170.513178
FJD 2.623943
FKP 0.869096
GBP 0.871031
GEL 3.146012
GGP 0.869096
GHS 14.169633
GIP 0.869096
GMD 83.276225
GNF 10032.491779
GTQ 8.863017
GYD 242.001254
HKD 9.00066
HNL 30.37535
HRK 7.53485
HTG 151.521912
HUF 390.372158
IDR 19188.56908
ILS 3.766877
IMP 0.869096
INR 102.604689
IQD 1515.319073
IRR 48649.920984
ISK 141.580305
JEP 0.869096
JMD 186.006416
JOD 0.820032
JPY 176.47678
KES 149.388139
KGS 101.145435
KHR 4655.907812
KMF 490.402506
KPW 1040.913009
KRW 1643.65798
KWD 0.355102
KYD 0.963967
KZT 622.640209
LAK 25094.723383
LBP 103583.653433
LKR 350.062695
LRD 211.105137
LSL 19.941139
LTL 3.415169
LVL 0.699622
LYD 6.291173
MAD 10.599637
MDL 19.641174
MGA 5197.664367
MKD 61.592323
MMK 2428.139548
MNT 4158.871994
MOP 9.271934
MRU 46.373162
MUR 52.628688
MVR 17.69764
MWK 2005.898625
MXN 21.251974
MYR 4.886628
MZN 73.8497
NAD 19.941139
NGN 1697.337269
NIO 42.57087
NOK 11.676154
NPR 164.091264
NZD 2.010587
OMR 0.444722
PAB 1.15668
PEN 3.967017
PGK 4.930784
PHP 67.408332
PKR 327.590193
PLN 4.256383
PYG 8116.352819
QAR 4.227582
RON 5.091857
RSD 117.119475
RUB 93.900855
RWF 1678.345815
SAR 4.338232
SBD 9.567199
SCR 17.182661
SDG 695.705508
SEK 11.010242
SGD 1.500748
SHP 0.908914
SLE 26.850726
SLL 24253.543152
SOS 661.102925
SRD 44.388965
STD 23939.497261
STN 24.488996
SVC 10.121452
SYP 15038.496425
SZL 19.933043
THB 37.817101
TJS 10.705389
TMT 4.059702
TND 3.406169
TOP 2.708899
TRY 48.375739
TTD 7.858469
TWD 35.358159
TZS 2839.477937
UAH 48.168355
UGX 3965.218181
USD 1.15661
UYU 46.329181
UZS 14023.698282
VES 218.614173
VND 30465.114333
VUV 140.803343
WST 3.227246
XAF 655.66237
XAG 0.023155
XAU 0.00029
XCD 3.125797
XCG 2.084663
XDR 0.815342
XOF 655.659537
XPF 119.331742
YER 276.430099
ZAR 19.910098
ZMK 10410.880562
ZMW 26.17024
ZWL 372.428033
  • RIO

    0.4400

    67.44

    +0.65%

  • GSK

    0.2150

    43.655

    +0.49%

  • NGG

    0.4200

    73.75

    +0.57%

  • BTI

    -0.4200

    50.94

    -0.82%

  • SCS

    0.0400

    16.57

    +0.24%

  • CMSC

    0.1030

    23.793

    +0.43%

  • AZN

    0.2800

    85.32

    +0.33%

  • RYCEF

    -0.4400

    15.09

    -2.92%

  • BCC

    0.1400

    74.03

    +0.19%

  • VOD

    0.0850

    11.365

    +0.75%

  • BP

    -0.3160

    33.974

    -0.93%

  • RELX

    -0.2400

    44.91

    -0.53%

  • JRI

    -0.0100

    14

    -0.07%

  • BCE

    0.1500

    23.59

    +0.64%

  • CMSD

    0.0700

    24.34

    +0.29%

  • RBGPF

    -0.1800

    75.55

    -0.24%

'Like human trafficking': how the US deported five men to Eswatini
'Like human trafficking': how the US deported five men to Eswatini / Photo: Paz PIZARRO - AFP

'Like human trafficking': how the US deported five men to Eswatini

Roberto Mosquera's family had no trace of him for a month after he was arrested by US immigration agents, until a government social media post revealed he had been deported to Africa’s last absolute monarchy.

Text size:

Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents had picked up the 58-year-old Cuban at a routine check-in with immigration officials on June 13 in Miramar, Florida, said Ada, a close family friend, who spoke to AFP under a pseudonym for fear of US government retaliation.

They told his family they had sent him back to Cuba, she said, a country he had left more than four decades earlier as a 13-year-old.

But on July 16, Ada recognised her lifelong friend in a photograph posted on X by US Assistant Homeland Security Secretary Tricia McLaughlin, who announced that Mosquera and four other detainees had been flown to tiny Eswatini.

It was a country Ada had never heard of, and 13,000 kilometres (8,000 miles) away, wedged between South Africa and Mozambique.

The Cuban and the nationals of Jamaica, Laos, Vietnam and Yemen were sent to the kingdom under a deal seen by AFP in which Eswatini agreed to accept up to 160 deportees in exchange for $5.1 million to "build its border and migration management capacity".

The Jamaican, 62-year-old Orville Etoria, was repatriated to Jamaica in September but 10 more deportees arrived on October 9, according to the Eswatini government.

Washington said the five men sent to Eswatini were "criminals" convicted of charges from child rape to murder, but lawyers and relatives told AFP that all of them had long served their sentences and had been living freely in the United States for years.

In tightly controlled Eswatini, where King Mswati III's government is accused of political repression, the deportees have been jailed in a maximum-security prison without any charge.

They have no access to legal counsel and are only allowed to talk to their families in minutes-long video calls once a week under the watch of armed guards, lawyers told AFP.

The men are in a "legal black hole", said US-based lawyer Tin Thanh Nguyen.

– 'Not a monster' –

"It’s like a bad dream," said Ada, who has known Mosquera since childhood.

McLaughlin’s X post described him and the other four deportees as "individuals so uniquely barbaric that their home countries refused to take them back".

In the attached photo, Mosquera sports a thick white beard, with tattoos peeping out of his orange shirt, and is described as a "latin king street gang member" convicted of "first-degree murder".

But "he's not the monster or the barbaric prisoner that they're saying," said Ada, whom AFP contacted through his lawyer.

Mosquera had been a gang member in his youth, she said, but he was convicted of attempted murder -- not homicide -– in July 1989 for shooting a man in the leg.

Court documents seen by AFP confirmed he was sentenced to nine years in prison, released in 1996 and then jailed again in 2009 for three years, for offences including grand theft auto and assaulting a law enforcement official.

"When Roberto came out, he changed his life," according to Ada. "He got married, had four beautiful little girls. He talks out against gang violence and has a family that absolutely loves him."

A judge ordered his deportation after his first conviction overturned his legal residency, but he remained in the United States because Cuba often does not accept deportees, lawyers said.

He checked in with immigration authorities every year and had been working for a plumbing company for 13 years until his surprise detention and deportation, Ada told AFP.

"They have painted him out as a monster, which he's not," she said. "He's redeemed himself."

– Denied legal support –

The men sent to Eswatini were caught up in a push by the Trump administration to expel undocumented migrants to "third countries", with others deported to Ghana, Rwanda and South Sudan in shadowy deals criticised by rights groups.

They were not informed they were being deported until they were already onboard the airplane, lawyers for each of them told AFP.

"Right when they were about to land in Eswatini, that's when ICE gave them a notice saying you're going to be deported to Eswatini. And none of them signed the letter," said Nguyen, who represents men from Vietnam and Laos.

"It's like modern-day human trafficking, through official channels," he told AFP, describing how he was contacted by the Vietnamese man's family after they too recognised his photo on social media.

The lawyer, who said he had been "a hotline" for the Southeast Asian community in the United States since Donald Trump came to power in January, trawled through Facebook groups to track down relatives of the other detainee described only as a "citizen of Laos".

The deportees were denied contact with their lawyers and also with a local attorney, who tried to visit them in the Matsapha Correctional Centre 30 kilometres (20 miles) south of the capital Mbabane, infamous for holding political prisoners.

Eswatini attorney Sibusiso Nhlabatsi said he was told by prison officers that the men had refused to see him.

"We know for a fact that’s not true," said Alma David, the US-based lawyer for Mosquera and another deportee from Yemen.

Her clients told their families they were never informed of Nhlabatsi's visits and had requested legal counsel on multiple occasions.

When David herself requested a private call with her clients, "the chief of the prison said, 'no, you can't, this is not like in the US'," she said. The official told her to seek permission from the US embassy.

Nhlabatsi last week won a court application to represent the men but the government immediately appealed, suspending the ruling.

"The judges, the commissioner of the prison, the attorney general -- no one wants to go against the king or the prime minister, so everybody is just running around in circles, delaying," said Nguyen.

– 'Layers of cruelty' –

Eswatini, under the thumb of 57-year-old Mswati for 39 years, has said it intends to return all the deportees to their home countries.

But only one has been repatriated so far, the Jamaican Etoria.

Two weeks after his release, he was "still adjusting to life in a country where he hasn't lived in 50 years", his New York-based lawyer Mia Unger told AFP.

Reportedly freed on arrival, he had completed a sentence for murder and was living in New York before ICE agents arrested him.

Etoria held a valid Jamaican passport and the country had not said they would refuse his return, despite the US administration's claims that the deportees' home countries would not take them back.

"If the United States had just deported him to Jamaica in the first place, that would already have been a very difficult and painful adjustment for him and his family," Unger said.

"Instead, they send him halfway across the world to a country he's never been to, where he has no ties, imprison him with no charges and don't tell his family anything," she said.

"The layers of cruelty are really surprising."

Accused of crushing political opposition and rights activists, the government of Eswatini has given few details of the detainees or the deal it signed with the United States to take them in.

Nguyen said the new group of 10 included three Vietnamese, one Filipino and one Cambodian.

"Regardless of what they were convicted of and what they did, they're still being used as pawns in a dystopian game exchanging bodies for money," David told AFP.

The last time Mosquera's family saw him, in a video call from the Eswatini jail last week, he had lost hair and "gotten very thin", Ada said.

"This has taken a toll on everybody," she said, her voice breaking. "It’s atrocious. It's a death sentence."

U.Ptacek--TPP