
US Deportation Flights to Central African Republic and Jamaica Talks Signal Expanding Immigration Crackdown
Washington prepares to send migrants to Bangui despite court orders, shutters a controversial Florida facility, and negotiates third-country transfers with Kingston.
The Trump administration is poised to launch its first deportation flight to the Central African Republic, a move that pushes the boundaries of its mass expulsion campaign into volatile new territory. According to officials and legal representatives, the flight scheduled for Thursday will forcibly transport more than twenty people to Bangui, including Iranian women, Syrians, and Afghans. Several of those on the manifest had previously secured court orders barring their removal to home countries where they faced a credible risk of persecution or torture. By redirecting them to a third country with which they have no ties, Washington is testing a legal grey zone that critics say evades non-refoulement obligations under international law.
At the same time, the administration has quietly emptied a detention facility in the Florida Everglades that became a symbol of its hardline approach. The Department of Homeland Security confirmed all detainees have been transferred out of the site known as Alligator Alcatraz, citing the approaching Atlantic hurricane season. While officials did not specify whether the closure is permanent, some detainees were moved to another ICE facility in northern Florida dubbed Deportation Depot. The reshuffle occurs against a backdrop of sharply rising mortality inside American immigration detention: more than 50 detainees have died since January 2025, a rate that has more than doubled under the current enforcement push. Deaths include a Vietnamese man with a heart condition who collapsed in an Indiana facility, a Chinese man found hanged in a Pennsylvania shower, and a Honduran man who died in a New York cell without receiving emergency care.
In the Caribbean, the administration is simultaneously widening its network of third-country transfer agreements. Jamaica’s national security minister confirmed the signing of a memorandum of understanding with the US Department of Homeland Security, under which the island would accept up to 25 non-Jamaican deportees every two weeks. The arrangement does not envisage holding the transferees in detention, though officials acknowledged that housing details have yet to be determined. The deal places Jamaica alongside a growing list of regional partners enlisted to absorb migrants who cannot be easily returned to their countries of origin, deepening divisions within the Caribbean over cooperation with Washington’s immigration agenda.
Viewed from Washington, these parallel developments represent a multi-pronged strategy to dismantle logistical and legal obstacles to mass deportation. The Central African Republic flight tests the limits of refoulement protections by rerouting vulnerable individuals to a third country with a fragile security situation. The shuttering of Alligator Alcatraz, whether temporary or permanent, removes a facility that had become a lightning rod for criticism while concentrating detainees in less visible locations. Jamaica’s willingness to accept third-country nationals offers a blueprint for offshore processing that could ease capacity pressures. Yet from Bangui, Kingston, and European capitals monitoring the erosion of asylum norms, the moves raise profound questions about sovereignty, human rights, and the transactional turn in American migration diplomacy. As hurricane season provides cover for facility closures, the legal storms over these deportation flights are only beginning to gather.
How the same story is told elsewhere.
2 editorial groups · 3 languages
The Trump administration is about to deport migrants to the Central African Republic, even though many have court orders barring their removal to countries where they would face persecution or torture. Jamaica is in talks to receive expelled migrants, joining Mexico, El Salvador and others. This marks a dangerous shift toward outsourcing deportations to terror zones.
The Department of Homeland Security moved all detainees out of the 'Alligator Alcatraz' facility in Florida due to hurricane season concerns. The migrants were transferred to other sites, including the 'Deportation Depot' in the northern part of the state. The operation was framed as a precautionary safety measure for the detainees.
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