Published: 14:19, February 9, 2025
Local Brazilian govt probes human rights violations in US repatriation of migrants
By Xinhua

A Brazilian migrant deported from the United States walks upon arrival at the International Airport in Confins, Minas Gerais state, Brazil on Feb 7, 2025. (PHOTO / AFP)

SAO PAULO - The authorities of Ceara, a northeastern state in Brazil, announced on Friday that they are investigating potential human rights violations during the repatriation of Brazilian migrants by the United States.

They reported that among the 111 Brazilian migrants deported by the United States, several were handcuffed and shackled during the flight, and the majority were denied food for 12 hours.

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"The people aboard the plane told us that they suffered a lot," said Socorro Franca, secretary of human rights of the state, at a press conference after receiving the deportees at the airport of Fortaleza, the regional capital.

Franca added that upon arrival in Brazil, the deportees' restraints were removed, and they were provided with essential supplies, including mineral water, food and hygiene kits, allowing them to freshen up at a reception center.

READ MORE: Brazil condemns handcuffing of deportees on flight from US

Since the new US administration assumed office, it has continued to pressure Latin American countries on the issue of large-scale repatriation of undocumented immigrants.

On Jan 24, when a charter flight deporting migrants arrived in Manaus, a city in northern Brazil, 88 deported Brazilians were still handcuffed. The Brazilian government deemed this treatment "degrading" and "unacceptable." In response, Brazil's foreign ministry summoned the charge d'affaires of the US Embassy in Brazil to address the matter.