The Trump administration has resumed deportation flights after a Supreme Court ruling allowed the Department of Homeland Security to deport migrants to countries outside their origin. The administration is pursuing agreements with around 51 countries to facilitate these deportations, with Eswatini and South Sudan among those accepting flights. Alarm has been raised by human rights organizations regarding the safety and stability of the destination countries, but the administration continues to support these measures to handle migrant deportations.
The Trump administration restarted deportation flights after the Supreme Court ruled that the DHS could resume sending migrants to countries that were not their place of origin.
The U.S. aims to sign third-country deportation agreements with many countries to support the administration's deportation plans.
At least two of the approached countries, Eswatini and South Sudan, have accepted flights from the U.S., allowing deportation of non-citizens.
The prospect of deporting migrants to unstable countries has raised alarm among human rights groups, yet the idea has strong support within the administration.
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