The UN right main expressed concern on Tuesday about the large numbers of non-nationals being deported from the country, particularly the thousands who were sent to a mega-prison in El Salvador. Volker Turk, the high director for human rights at the UN, “raises major concerns regarding a wide range of rights that are essential to both US and worldwide law.” His business referenced US data in a statement that revealed that between January 20 and January 20 142, 000 people had been deported from the US. After US President Donald Trump in March invoking the 1798 Alien Enemies Act to deliver alleged Tren de Aragua people to a large jail, CECOT, in El Salvador, it expressed particular concern about the situation. Since then, the US Supreme Court and a number of lower courts have temporarily halted arrests due to the lack of due approach. The UN privileges office stated that the tragedy and locations of at least 245 Citizens and about 30 Salvadorans who have been moved to El Salvador are still a mystery. More than 100 Venezuelans allegedly held in CECOT are being reportedly the subject of data provided by the rights business. These reports show that some detainees were unaware that the US government intended to arrest them to a third nation, that many did not have legal representation, and that they were ineffectively unwilling to challenge their removal before being flown out of the country, according to the statement. It made it clear that the prisoners ‘ legal standing in El Salvador is still unknown, and that no national lists of them have been released by US or Salvadoran authorities to date. Families we spoke to expressed a sense of total helplessness in the wake of what transpired and the discomfort they felt as their relatives were treated as violent criminals, also terrorists, without any legal authority to determine the validity of the accusations leveled against them, Turk said. The UN right captain expressed his appreciation for the crucial role that the US courts, legal group, and civil world are playing in ensuring the protection of human rights in this context.” The use of chains on some of the people, as well as the insulting language used against migrants, has also been deeply disturbing. I have asked the US government to take the necessary steps to ensure compliance with due procedure, to give fast and complete effect to the decisions of its courts, to protect children’s rights, and to prevent any person being taken to any nation where there is a real danger of torture or other irreparable harm.
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