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Jamaican man deported by the US to Eswatini has been repatriated, authorities say

Jamaican man deported by the US to Eswatini has been repatriated, authorities say
Pro-democracy activists protest outside the US Embassy in Pretoria, South Africa, on September 19, 2025   -  
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Themba Hadebe/Copyright 2025 The AP. All rights reserved.

Eswatini

A Jamaican man who was among five migrants deported by the United States to Eswatini has been repatriated to his home country, Eswatini authorities said Monday.

Orville Etoria was held in a maximum-security prison in Eswatini for more than two months without charges or access to legal counsel, his lawyers have said, accusing the U.S. of deporting him there unlawfully in mid-July.

The lawyers had said the U.S. sent him to the southern African nation under the Trump administration's third country deportation program even though Jamaica was willing to take him back. They alleged Etoria and the four other men were then repeatedly denied visits by a lawyer while they were held at the prison.

The lawyers didn't immediately reply to a request for comment Monday about Etoria's arrival in Jamaica.

The U.S. has said it wants to deport Kilmar Abrego Garcia to Eswatini, a tiny kingdom bordering South Africa where the king holds absolute power and has been accused of clamping down on pro-democracy movements.

Abrego Garcia’s wrongful deportation to his native El Salvador and ongoing case has become a flashpoint in U.S. President Donald Trump’s crackdown on immigration.

Etoria was repatriated on Sunday with the assistance of the United Nations’ International Organization for Migration, Thabile Mdluli, the Eswatini government’s acting spokesperson, said in a statement.

She said there were “engagements” with the other four men from Cuba, Laos, Vietnam and Yemen to have them sent home.

The five men were described as dangerous criminals by the U.S. Department of Homeland Security. It said they had been sent to Eswatini because their home countries refused to take them back.

Eswatini, in an apparent contradiction of that, said they were only there in transit and would be sent home.

The five men had been convicted of serious crimes including murder and child rape, and all were in the U.S. illegally and had deportation orders, DHS said. Their lawyers said they had all completed their criminal sentences but were sent overseas to be held in another prison without charges or due process.

The U.S. has sent deportees to at least four African countries under the new program: South Sudan, Eswatini, Rwanda and Ghana. It has an agreement with another Africa nation, Uganda, though no deportations there have been announced yet.

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