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A US referee in Boston ordered a temporary block of the Trump administration plan to deport migrants to Libya, saying that this “would clearly violate” a previous order he has made, which guarantees their right to a proper process.
The order came after two US employees told BBC CBS News partner that the United States could soon start deporting migrants to Libya as part of his immigration repression.
In response to the deportation report, Libyan Prime Minister Abdul Hamid Dbebe wrote in a statement of X that his country refused to “be a destination for the deportation of migrants on each pretext.”
In response to the same report, a US Department of State spokesman said they would not discuss the matter.
Officials who spoke with CBS – who demanded anonymity – said the US military could fly migrants to the North African country this week.
This move is likely to cause disputes – Libya has been sunk in conflict for more than a decade and the US State Department advises Americans not to travel there because of factors such as crime, terrorism and civic unrest.
Immigration attorneys moved quickly on Wednesday to prevent the Trump administration from carrying out the deportations by asking a judge at Massachusetts to “emergency” issued a temporary block.
“Numerous credible sources report that flights are preparing to leave the United States immediately, bearing members of the Libya Removal Class,” writes lawyers in their court file
US District Judge Brian Murphy in Boston replied late Wednesday afternoon, issuing an order that limited the Trump administration’s ability to deport migrants quickly.
In his decision, Judge Murphy said that the deportations “rude” were opposed to an order he had previously issued, which defended the proper rights of migrants subject to final deportation orders.
This stronger solution requires employees to provide migrants with a written notice in their own language and a meaningful opportunity to file a claim to prevent them from removing them.
Asked if he was aware of the plan to deport migrants to Libya, President Donald Trump said on Wednesday: “I don’t know. You will have to ask for internal security.”
Libya is believed to be one of several countries asked to accept deportations of migrants from the Trump administration.
This week Rwanda confirmed that it was in the “early stage” of conversations with the United StatesWhile Benin, Angola, Equatorial Guinea, Esvatini and Moldova are listed in media reports.
It is unclear how many people are hoping to deport to Libya or in which part of Libya the migrants will be sent.
Following the overthrow of former ruler Muammar Gaddafi in 2011, the country is divided into two -the West is governed by a UN -Land -backed government, from which DBEibe is Prime Minister, while the military strong gene Haftar Haftar has controlled the East.
Haftar’s son met with US staff in Washington last Monday, but the US State Department and a Libyan spokesman said the meeting was not for deportations.
Upon his return to service in January, President Trump launched a campaign for mass deportation – sometimes relying on controversial tactics such as summoning centuries -old legislation.
Earlier this week the government Offer migrants who are in the US an illegal amount worth $ 1,000 (751 pounds) to leave the countryS