Secret Migrant Deportations Scandal: US Lawsuit Alleges Ghana Used as 'Transit Hub'

The Trump administration faced intense scrutiny this week over its alleged intentional circumvention of U.S. immigration laws, particularly concerning the deportation of Nigerian and Gambian migrants to Ghana. U.S. District Judge Tanya Chutkan, presiding in Washington, D.C., scheduled an emergency hearing following claims by lawyers representing some migrants that their clients faced potential torture or persecution if ultimately sent to their home countries. Judge Chutkan, an appointee of former President Barack Obama, later ordered the Trump administration to submit a report by 9 p.m. EDT, detailing its efforts to prevent Ghana from further deporting the migrants to Nigeria or Gambia. She explicitly stated that it appeared the administration had designed the deal with Ghana as an “end run” around U.S. legal requirements, which mandate against sending migrants to dangerous situations in their countries of origin. Judge Chutkan underscored that these were “not speculative concerns” and that the U.S. government itself acknowledged that these individuals should not be returned to their home countries.
These deportations align with President Trump’s broader strategy aimed at accelerating removals by sending migrants to “third countries,” thereby increasing pressure on undocumented migrants in the U.S. to leave. Ghana’s President John Dramani Mahama confirmed the existence of an agreement with the U.S. to accept West African deportees, noting that his nation had already received 14 individuals. President Mahama clarified that Ghana's role was strictly as a temporary transit point, not the final destination for these migrants.
A civil rights lawsuit filed on Friday by advocacy groups, including the American Civil Liberties Union and Asian Americans Advancing Justice, on behalf of five of the migrants, brought forth disturbing allegations. The plaintiffs, who are nationals of Nigeria and The Gambia, were reportedly removed from a Louisiana immigration detention center, shackled, and placed on a U.S. military cargo plane without being informed of their destination. The complaint shockingly detailed that several migrants on the 16-hour flight were held in straitjackets. Upon their arrival in Accra, Ghana, the migrants were allegedly transported to a remote and “squalid” open-air detention camp known as Dema Camp, which was surrounded by armed guards. The lawsuit highlights that these migrants were never afforded the opportunity to articulate fears of persecution in Ghana, a country that was never designated as a removal country during their legal proceedings in the United States.
The lawsuit further asserted that the five plaintiffs possessed U.S. legal protections against deportation to their home countries. One plaintiff, identified as K.S., a bisexual man, had been granted protection under the UN Convention Against Torture due to his sexuality. Despite this crucial protection, he was reportedly deported from Ghana to The Gambia on September 10 and is now in hiding, fearing for his life. The other four plaintiffs—D.A., T.L., I.O., and D.S.—reportedly remain in detention in Ghana, having been informed of their impending removal to their respective home countries. The lawsuit directly accuses the U.S. government of utilizing Ghana as a “transit hub” to secretly deport migrants, thereby circumventing the legal protections granted by American immigration judges. It describes this operation as a deliberate “end-run” around U.S. immigration law and explicitly states that “Defendants have enlisted the government of Ghana to do their dirty work.”
The lawsuit names several high-ranking U.S. officials as defendants, including Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem, Acting ICE Director Todd Lyons, Attorney General Pamela Bondi, and Secretary of State Marco Rubio. The plaintiffs' legal arguments are grounded in alleged violations of the Immigration and Nationality Act, the Convention Against Torture, and their due process rights under the Fifth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution. They are seeking a court order from Judge Tanya Chutkan to ensure their immediate return to the United States and to prevent any further removals.
In response to these developments, the U.S. Department of Justice stated in a court filing that it no longer had custody of the migrants, arguing that the court lacked the authority to intervene in diplomatic actions. The department also referenced a June Supreme Court decision, which it claimed permitted the government to send migrants to nations other than their country of citizenship. U.S. Department of Homeland Security spokesperson Tricia McLaughlin denied the allegations that detainees on the flight were made to wear straitjackets but did not offer comments regarding the accusations of circumventing immigration law.
The deportations have also triggered significant criticism within Ghana itself. Opposition lawmakers issued a statement on Friday, demanding the suspension of the agreement with the U.S., arguing that it should have been approved by Ghana’s National Assembly. They warned that the deal “risks our country being perceived as aligning itself with the U.S. government’s current immigration enforcement regime, one which has been criticized as harsh and discriminatory.” A Ghana government spokesperson did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the matter.
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