close
close

Three migrants win a temporary block of potential transfer in Guantanamo – public radio in South Carolina

Three migrants win a temporary block of potential transfer in Guantanamo – public radio in South Carolina

A Federal Court in New Mexico prevented the Trump administration from sending three Venezuelan men to Guantanamo Bay. This is the first legal obstacle thrown to the Trump administration as it seeks to send thousands of migrants to detention to the naval base near Cuba.

Three Venezuelan men in the arrest of federal immigration staff in New Mexico submitted a proposal seeking a temporary restraining order to block their transfer to Guantanamo Bay as they “entered the profile” of people who were already transferred and fear of Such a transfer will be upcoming, according to court documents.

New Mexico Judge Kenneth Gonzalez approved his proposal on Sunday night.

Trump’s plan to send 30,000 migrants to the US Naval Base in Guantanamo Bay, facilitated by an enforcement order, is likely to face additional legal, logistical and political challenges.

The United States flew the first migrants to a temporary housing facility there last week, and US officials said they would be held separately from the US military prison, which houses suspected foreign terrorists, including the alleged September 11, Halid Sheikhmad.

The Ministry of Interior Security and Immigration and the application of customs did not respond to requests for comment on the temporary restraining order.

The Order in New Mexico is limited to the three men and does not prevent other people from being transferred to facilities in Guantanamo.

Immigration lawyers say the relocation of people from the continental US can limit legal access and proper process.

“Sending immigrants from the US to Guantanamo and holds them selflessly without access to a lawyer or the outside world, opens a new shameful chapter in the history of this notorious prison,” Lee Gellern, deputy director of the project rights of immigrants in US civil liberties Union, He said in a statement. ACLU wrote on Friday to the heads of federal agencies responsible with the supervision of transfers, requesting more information.

“It is illegal for our government to use Guantanamo as a legal black hole, but that’s exactly what Trump administration does,” Gellern said.

Interior Security Secretary Christie Nov, who visited the base last week, said the United States wanted to keep people at the base only for a short period of time before being sent to another country.

“My goal is that people are not in these facilities for weeks and months. My goal is that there is a short stay, they are able to close them, to take them, to follow the process and to return them to their country” on CNN Inside the politics On Sunday. But she added that she would not rule out the possibility of some people staying in the base for weeks or even months.

Copyright 2025 NPR

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *