DRC agrees to take third-county deportees from US - JURIST - News
Summary
News usicegov , Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons The Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) announced Sunday that it will receive third-country deportees from the US as part of a new arrangement between the nations, signaling ongoing Trump administration efforts to continue controversial removal practices. The announcement coincided with reports that the US sent a dozen individuals to Uganda last week as part of a separate third-country deportation agreement with the neighboring African nation. The US has entered into similar third-county deportation agreements with several nations, including Costa Rica, El Salvador, Mexico, Panama, Eswatini, Ghana, Rwanda, and South Sudan. After sanctioning Rwanda for its support of armed-groups, in March the US announced both African nations agreed to coordinated de-escalation steps.
News usicegov , Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons The Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) announced Sunday that it will receive third-country deportees from the US as part of a new arrangement between the nations, signaling ongoing Trump administration efforts to continue controversial removal practices. The announcement coincided with reports that the US sent a dozen individuals to Uganda last week as part of a separate third-country deportation agreement with the neighboring African nation. The US has entered into similar third-county deportation agreements with several nations, including Costa Rica, El Salvador, Mexico, Panama, Eswatini, Ghana, Rwanda, and South Sudan. After sanctioning Rwanda for its support of armed-groups, in March the US announced both African nations agreed to coordinated de-escalation steps.
## Article Content
News
usicegov
, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons
The Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC)
announced
Sunday that it will receive third-country deportees from the US as part of a new arrangement between the nations, signaling ongoing Trump administration efforts to continue
controversial
removal practices.
DRC’s statement said the nation will begin to accept deportees in April, and the US will cover costs to facilitate the deal. The government called the arrangement “
temporary
” and did not disclose how many deportees it will receive. The nation pledged to an ongoing “commitment to human dignity and international solidarity” regarding arrivals, who will be held at sites near capital city
Kinshasa.
The announcement
coincided
with reports that the US sent a dozen individuals to Uganda last week as part of a separate third-country deportation agreement with the neighboring African nation.
The US has entered into similar third-county deportation agreements with several nations, including
Costa Rica, El Salvador, Mexico, Panama, Eswatini, Ghana, Rwanda, and South Sudan. Legal activists and rights groups have
criticized
the practice, arguing that sending migrants to a non-home country threatens death or torture without due process. Such transfers are often chaotic, with deportees reportedly held in military detention
camps
and transported in
straight jackets
with few hours notice.
Ongoing lawsuits continue to examine the efficacy of the practice. In February, a federal district court
ruled
that the policy violated congressional mandates and Fifth Amendment, due process principles. The Trump administration appealed and, in March, a federal appellate court
placed
a stay on the lower court order while litigation continued.
Third-country deportations have also received attention through
high profile
media coverage, including coverage of
Kilmar Ábrego García. In October 2025, the US considered sending García to Liberia, despite federal court findings that he was mistakenly swept up in deportation proceedings. In March, García
accused
US prosecutors of vindictively charging him with human smuggling.
The US has acted as a primary peace broker for ongoing
conflict
between Rwanda and the DRC, in which the Rwanda government has allegedly backed rebel militia forces in the DRC. After sanctioning Rwanda for its support of armed-groups, in March the US
announced
both African nations agreed to coordinated de-escalation steps.
US involvement in the region follows its growing efforts to gain access to DRC’s rich mineral resources and “
rare-earth
” elements. In December 2025, the US State Department
published
a strategic partnership agreement with the DRC, stating a desire to strengthen national ties and “
secure…supply chains for critical minerals, safeguarding [US] national security…and maintaining competitiveness in strategic sectors including defense, energy, advanced technologies, and automotive industries.”
---
## Expert Analysis
### Merits
N/A
### Areas for Consideration
N/A
### Implications
- News usicegov , Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons The Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) announced Sunday that it will receive third-country deportees from the US as part of a new arrangement between the nations, signaling ongoing Trump administration efforts to continue controversial removal practices.
- DRC’s statement said the nation will begin to accept deportees in April, and the US will cover costs to facilitate the deal.
- The government called the arrangement “ temporary ” and did not disclose how many deportees it will receive.
- The nation pledged to an ongoing “commitment to human dignity and international solidarity” regarding arrivals, who will be held at sites near capital city Kinshasa.
### Expert Commentary
This article covers drc, third, country topics. Readability: Flesch-Kincaid grade 0.0. Word count: 434.
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