Trump says would ‘love’ to send US citizens to El Salvador jail

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Alleged gang members recently deported by the US government are pictured at the Terrorism Confinement Centre, in Tecoluca, El Salvador, on April 12.

Alleged gang members recently deported by the US government are pictured at the Terrorism Confinement Centre, in Tecoluca, El Salvador, on April 12.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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WASHINGTON - President Donald Trump stepped up his extraordinary threats to send Americans to foreign jails, saying on April 15 he would love to deport “home-grown” US citizens who commit violent crimes to a notorious mega-prison in El Salvador.

Mr Trump raised the idea in talks on April 14 with Salvadoran President Nayib Bukele – the self-proclaimed “world’s coolest dictator” who has already taken illegal migrants from the US into his country’s jails.

But the 78-year-old Republican doubled down on the idea of sending US citizens to El Salvador too, as he further tests the limits of fundamental US rights.

“I call them home-grown criminals,” Mr Trump said according to excerpts of an interview with Fox Noticias, a Spanish-language programme being broadcast later on April 15.

“The ones that grew up and something went wrong and they hit people over the head with a baseball bat and push people into subways,” he added.

“We are looking into it and we want to do it. I would love to do it.”

On April 14, Mr Trump said during his meeting with Mr Bukele in the Oval Office that he had asked Attorney-General Pam Bondi to examine the possibility of sending Americans to El Salvador.

The iron-fisted Mr Bukele made the extraordinary offer to take in prisoners from the US shortly after Mr Trump’s inauguration for a second term, in exchange for

a fee of US$6 million (S$7.9 million).

Mr Trump has already

sent more than 250 migrants

there, mostly under a centuries-old wartime law that deprives them of due process – but he has increasingly started talking about sending US citizens too.

Mr Trump’s administration already faces pressure over the case of a migrant who was mistakenly deported from the US to El Salvador under the Bukele deal.

Mr Bukele on April 14 dismissed the “preposterous” idea of returning the man – Kilmar Abrego Garcia, a father who was living in the US state of Maryland – to the US.

The US Supreme Court has ordered the Trump administration to facilitate his return from the notorious jail after

the White House said he was deported after an “administrative error.”

Trump officials insist he is an illegal migrant and a member of El Salvador’s notorious MS-13 gang, despite never having been convicted. AFP

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