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San Salvador, El Salvador – US Secretary of State Marco Rubio said late on Monday that President of El Salvador proposed to accept US deportors to any nationality, including violent US criminals who are now closed in the United States.

President Naib Bouke “agreed to the most precious, unusual, unusually migrating agreement all over the world,” Rubio said at a signing ceremony for an unrelated civil nuclear agreement with Foreign Minister of El Salvador.

“He is also proposed to do the same for dangerous criminals who are currently in custody and are serving their sentence in the United States, although they are US citizens or legal residents,” Rubio said. He had just met a bouquet at his farmhouse in Lake outside San Salvador for several hours.

After Rubio spoke, an US employee said the Trump administration had no current plans to try to deport US citizens, but said the bouquet’s proposal was significant. The US government cannot deport US citizens and such a move will be met with significant legal challenges.

Rubio visits El Salvador to press a friendly government to do more to respond to the Trump administration’s demands for major immigration repression against the background of disturbance in Washington over the status of the main agency for foreign development of the government.

He arrived in San Salvador shortly after watching the US -funded flights with 43 migrants left Panama to Colombia. This came a day after Rubio reported a warning to Panama that if the government did not move immediately to reduce or eliminate China’s presence in the Panama Canal, the United States would act for it.

However, migration was the main number of the day, as it would be for the next stops of the Rubio Central America, the Costa Rica, Guatemala and the Dominican Republic after Panama and El Salvador.

The administration of President Donald Trump gives priority to stopping people to travel to the United States and has worked with regional countries to enhance the implementation of immigration at their borders and to accept deported by the United States.

The Rubio Agreement describes El Salvador to adopt foreign citizens arrested in the United States for violating US Immigration Laws is known as a Safe Third State Agreement. This would mean that the United States can deport non -Salvadian migrants to El Salvador.

Officials have suggested that this may be an option for members of the Venezuelan band, convicted of crimes in the United States, if Venezuela refuses to accept them, but Rubio said the bouquet’s proposal was detained for every nationality.

Rubio said that the bouquet then went further and said that his country was ready to accept and close the US citizens or legal residents, convicted and closed for violent crimes.

Human rights activists have warned that El Salvador lacks a consistent policy of treating asylum seekers and refugees and that such an agreement may not be limited to violent criminals.

Manuel Flores, Secretary -General of the National Liberation Front of the Opposition of the Left Opposition, criticized the Safe Third Party Plan, saying it would signal that the region was the “backyard of Washington to throw away the garbage”.

The deportment flight that Rubio watched was loaded in Panama City, carrying migrants detained by the Panama authorities after illegally passing through the gap of Darienia from Colombia. The State Department says such deportations are sending a determination message. The US has provided Panama with financial assistance of nearly $ 2.7 million flights and tickets, as an agreement was signed on their financing.

Rubio was on the asphalt for leaving the flight, which took 32 men and 11 women back to Colombia. It is unusual for a Secretary of State to personally witness such a law enforcement operation, especially in front of cameras.

“Mass migration is one of the great tragedies of the modern era,” Rubio said, speaking then in a nearby building. “This affects countries around the world. We admit that many people seek mass migration are often victims and victims along the way and this is not good for anyone.”

The deportation flight on Monday has come as Trump threatens actions against nations that will not accept flights from their United States citizens, and he briefly struck Colombia with penalties last week to refuse to initially accept two flights. Panama is more comprehensive and permits flights of third-party deported to land and send migrants back before reaching the United States.

“This is an effective way to end the flow of illegal migration, the mass migration that is destructive and destabilizing,” Rubio said. “And it would be impossible to do without the strong partnership we have here with our friends and allies in Panama. And we will continue to do so.”

His journey comes against the backdrop of freezing in foreign orders for help in the United States and suspension, which have closed US -funded programs aimed at illegal migration and crime in Central America countries. The State Department said on Sunday that Rubio approved the refusals for certain critical programs in countries it visits, but details are not available immediately.

While Rubio was out of the country, the US Agency’s employees were instructed on Monday to stay outside the Washington Agency’s headquarters after billionaire Elon Musk announced that Trump had agreed to close the agency.

Thousands of USAID employees have already been fired and the programs have been closed. Rubio told reporters in San Salvador that he is now a USAID administrator, but has delegated this authority so that he does not conduct his daily operations.

The change means that USAID is no longer an independent government agency, as it has been for decades – although its new status is likely to be challenged in court – and will be exhausted by the State Department by the department’s officers.

In his remarks, Rubio stressed that some and maybe many USAID programs will continue in the new configuration, but that the switch is necessary as the agency has become non -refundable to the executive branch and congress.

In his discussion over the weekend with Panama president in Panama channel Rubio said he hoped the Panamans would comply with his and Trump’s warnings to China. The Panamans were shaking about Trump’s insistence on restoring control over the US channel, which the United States transferred in 1999, although they agreed to withdraw from a Chinese infrastructure and development initiative.

“I understand that this is a delicate problem in Panama,” Rubio told reporters in San Salvador. “We don’t want to have a hostile and negative relationship with Panama,” he said. “I do not believe we do it. And we had a honest and respectful conversation. I hope it will bear fruit and lead to the days that come.”

But back to Washington, Trump was less diplomatic, saying, “China deals with the Panama Canal. They will not be long and that’s the way it should be.”

“We either want it back, or we’ll get something very strong, or we’ll bring it back,” Trump told reporters in the White House. “And China will be considered.”

As he in the past, Trump again criticized the Carter administration for signed a contract from the 70s of the last century to retreat control over the Panama Channel and said it was a pact that Panama has been completely breaking.

“They have agreed to certain things, but I’m not satisfied with it,” Trump said.

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