Trump to meet El Salvador’s president amid questions over deportations
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El Salvador's President Nayib Bukele has been fully supportive of US President Donald Trump’s immigration crackdown.
PHOTO: REUTERS
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WASHINGTON – President Donald Trump is set to meet with El Salvador President Nayib Bukele on April 14, a leader praised by the administration for opening his country’s prison system to alleged gang members and detainees Mr Trump wants out of the United States.
The Trump administration has deported hundreds of Venezuelans to El Salvador under the 1798 Alien Enemies Act, including a Maryland resident it has acknowledged deporting by mistake.
Mr Trump, who came into office in January promising to reform US immigration policy, has found a kindred spirit for that effort in Mr Bukele. The migrants El Salvador accepts from the US are housed in a high-security prison critics say engages in human rights abuses.
“I think he’s doing a fantastic job, and he’s taking care of a lot of problems that we have that we really wouldn’t be able to take care of from a cost standpoint,” Mr Trump told reporters on April 13 about Mr Bukele, referring to the cost of imprisoning the detainees in El Salvador.
“He’s been amazing. We have some very bad people in that prison. People that should have never been allowed into our country. People that murdered, drug dealers, some of the worst people on earth are in that prison. And he’s able to do that.”
Pressed on whether he had concerns about alleged human rights abuses at the mega-prison, Mr Trump said, “No”.
“I don’t see it. I don’t see that,” he said.
The US on April 12 deported 10 more people it alleges are gang members to El Salvador, said Secretary of State Marco Rubio, who called the alliance between Mr Trump and Mr Bukele “an example for security and prosperity in our hemisphere”.
Lawyers and relatives of the migrants held in El Salvador say they are not gang members and had no opportunity to contest the US government assertion that they were.
The Trump administration says it vetted migrants to ensure they belonged to Tren de Aragua, which it labels a terrorist organisation.
Wrongly deported
In March, after a judge said flights carrying migrants processed under the Alien Enemies Act should return to the US, Mr Bukele wrote “Oopsie... Too late” on social media alongside footage showing men being hustled off a plane in the dark of night.
The case of Mr Kilmar Abrego Garcia, a Maryland resident who was sent to El Salvador’s so-called Terrorism Confinement Centre on March 15 despite an order protecting him from deportation, has drawn particular attention.
The US Supreme Court upheld an order from Judge Paula Xinis directing the administration to “facilitate and effectuate” his return but said the term “effectuate” was unclear and might exceed her authority.
Mr Trump told reporters on April 11 that his administration would bring the man back if the high court directed it to.
However, in a court filing on April 13, the administration said it was not obligated

