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eSwatini court rules first Trump deportees in jail have right to lawyer

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Lawyers in eSwatini ​and the ⁠US have challenged the legality of the $5.1 million deal between the two countries.

A court in eSwatini has ruled that the first five migrants the United States (US) President’s Donald Trump administration sent to the African kingdom have a right to a lawyer, after they were denied ​legal representation on their transfer from the US to a Swazi jail ​in July.

The court rejected a government argument that the detainees had ⁠not specifically requested the human rights lawyer Sibusiso Nhlabatsi represent them. Nhlabatsi ​has been trying to fight the migrants’ case without access to them.

“There can be ​no real harm in granting the Respondent access to the detainees,” the three judges ruled in a decision reviewed by Reuters.
“If they do not wish to see the Respondent (they can) ​tell this to the Respondent to his face,” they said.

The detainees are among ​at least 19 third-country migrants from various countries in Africa, Asia and the Americas that Trump’s ‌administration ⁠deported to eSwatini as part of its crackdown on immigration. Other countries have also hosted migrants deported from the US

The judgment only applies to the first five arrivals, as the challenge was first launched on their behalf, although it could ​set a precedent ​for the others. ⁠eSwatini, an absolute monarchy ruled by King Mswati III, has released only two of the detainees so far, a Jamaican ​man last year and a Cambodian in March.

Lawyers in eSwatini ​and the ⁠US have challenged the legality of the $5.1 million deal between the two countries, which has resulted in deportees being incarcerated in the southern African nation despite having ⁠already served ​sentences for crimes committed on US soil.

The high ​court last month threw out a case filed by a local human rights lawyer that challenged the ​deal itself, though the lawyer has appealed.

–Reuters–