The United States government continues to demonstrate with its actions, the value it gives to international treaties on human rights, including the little value it gives to its own legislation, when it again deported Venezuelan citizens to El Salvador, in a new affront to the regulations that govern the matter.
The Secretary of State of the United States, Marco Rubio, was in charge of giving the news through his account in the social network X in which he wrote: “Last night another 10 criminals of foreign terrorist organizations MS-13 and Aragua train arrived last night. The alliance between Donald Trump and President Nayib Bukele has become an example of security and prosperity in our hemisphere.”
As is the custom of the Trump administration, the accusation against the new deportees was not accompanied by evidence that incriminated them with what is indicated by the Government, which again generates suspicion about the actions they execute from Washington.
The announcement was made a few hours after the arrival of the Central American president to that nation, who held an encounter with his American counterpart.
This is the third group of nationals who are kidnapped in the United States and transferred to El Salvador, with the excuse of belonging to the extinct Train of Aragua. Venezuelans are held at the Terrorism Confinement Center (CECOT), without prior trial and without having committed any crime in that Central American nation.
Trump and Bukele: The same style
Note for the constant violation of human rights in his megacárcel Cecot, Salvadoran President Nayib Bukele seems to have taken a second air to boost his action against international law, by rejecting the return to the US of a migrant deported by error.
Bukele said on Monday, emboldened At the meeting with Donald Trumpwhich will not return the United States to the Salvadoran migrant who was deported by mistake and sent to the megacárcel of the Central American Nation, pointing to it of alleged “terrorist.”
The American Supreme Court ordered last Thursday the return to the country of Salvadoran Kilmar Abrego García, who was sent to the Center for Confinement of Terrorism (CECOT) despite having a court order against his deportation.
“Of course I am not going to do it. How am I going to send a terrorist to the United States?” He said complacent to the question of journalists in the White House.
He said that El Salvador has just become the “safer nation on the continent”, so if he would release “criminals” he would become “the world capital of murders.”
