
Salvadoran President Nayib Bukele, on Sunday, April 20, sacrificed Venezuela an office of 252 Venezuelans deported to his country by the United States for an equal number of political prisoners held by the regime of President Nicolás.
The sacrifice followed a Broadide of President Donald Trump against the judges of the Supreme Court of the United States that on Saturday ordered him to stop for remaves such as that of Venezuelans, which the administration has carried out under a dark law of war. “I want to propose a humanitarian agreement that asks for the repatriation of 100 percent of the 252 Venezuelans who were deported,” Bukele wrote to Maduro in X.
The prisoners would be sent “in exchange for liberation and delivering or an identical number between the thousands of political prisoners you have,” he added. The Salvadoran leader, who was organized at the White House last week, said that “all Venezuelans we are in custody were arrested as part of an operation against gangs like Train El Aragua in the United States.”
In just over a month, 288 migrants accused by the Trump administration of belonging to gangs, including Train El Aragua, on Sunday, April 20, now defined as a terrorist organization by Washington, have been in El Salvador. The United States is paying the Bukele government to imprison them in the notorious Cecot prison of the country outside the San Salvador capital.
Attacking the judges
The Trump administration has faced judges at home for deportations. The Saturday’s order of the Supreme Court at least temporarily arrested what the rights groups warned were imminent imports of Venezuelan migrants held in Texas, which have been accused or were gang members.
In more general terms, the decision temporarily prevents the Government from expelling migrants under the law of the Alien enemies Law of 1798 used to round Japanese-American citizens Duration of World War II.
Trump Down administration officials affirmed that illegal immigration and gang activity are equivalent to an “invasion” of the United States and this justifies the use of the law. Trump lashed out Sunday on his real social platform, not specifically appointing the Superior Court, but hitting the “weak and ineffective judges and officials responsible for enforcing the law that are allowing this sinister attack against our nation to continue.”
The White House has been justifying heads with federal judges, rights groups and Democrats who say that Trump has trampled or ignored constitutionally enshrined rights to hurry to deport migrants, sometimes without the right to an audience. “We are getting closer and more to a constitutional crisis,” said Democratic Senator Amy Klobuchar CNN.
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In the most publicized case, Maryland’s resident, Kilmar Abrego García, was sent to CECOT without charge. The administration admitted that Abrego García had a leg included among those deported due to an “administrative error”, and the Supreme Court ruled that the government must “facilitate” its return.
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However, Trump has doubled, insisting that Abrego García is, in fact, a member of a gang, including the publication of a photo apparently managed on social networks on Friday of a symbol of gangs tattooed in his knuckles.
The Senator of Maryland, Chris Van Hollen, who with Abrego García on Thursday, said that the man was guardized for his arrest and felt threatened in prison. On Sunday, Van Hollen challenged the Trump administration to provide that these are US laws in their deportation sweep. “I agree with what the rule of law dictates,” he told CNN, “but at this time we have a president without law … who is at the order of the United States Supreme Court for the return of facilitation (Abrego García).”
Political and foreign prisoners
Bukele said Sunday that many of the Venezuelan detainees now in their country “have committed murder, others have committed violation and some had just arrested several times before deporting.”
“Unlike our detention … your political prisoners have not committed any crime. The only reason you are imprisoned is because you have opposed you and your electoral fraud,” Venezuela’s Maduro touched.
Maduro demanded the victory in a disputed presidential election last year, causing mass protests and a repression that left 28 dead people and 2,400 after bars. Around 500 of them remain locked up, thought activists say the dissident trial has continued.
Bukele added that he was looking for the launch of the prominent Venezuelans such as Rafael Túbares, son -in -law of Maduro’s presidential challenger, Edmundo González Urrutia; Roland Carrereno journalist; Rocio San Miguel activist lawyer; And opponents that have hidden legs for more than a year at the Caracas Embassy of Argentina.
Hello, he also cited 50 citizens of other nations, including American, European, the Middle East and Latin American. “Our Foreign Ministry will send formal correspondence,” he said.
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