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Venezuelan migrants detained in El Salvador seek justice in the United States #Venezuelan #migrants #detained #Salvador #seek #justice #United #States

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Among the 252 Venezuelans arrested in March in the United States and sent to a notorious Salvadoran prison demanded Friday the opportunity to challenge their designation as gang members in U.S. courts.

At a news conference in Caracas, representatives of the men said they wanted a chance to clear their names.

President Donald Trump’s administration deported the men, citing the Alien Enemies Act and claiming they were members of the Venezuelan Tren de Aragua gang.

They were arrested and sent to El Salvador’s Terrorism Containment Center (CECOT), where many say they were tortured.

The men were released four months later in a prisoner exchange deal with the United States and returned to Venezuela.

A federal court in Washington this week ordered the Trump administration to develop a plan to “facilitate the return” of dozens of these men.

A judge ruled that they “should not have been deported in the manner in which they were, with virtually no notice and no opportunity to challenge the grounds for their deportation.”

The court ordered the U.S. government to give the men an opportunity to challenge their gang designation in legal proceedings. This could also be done in other countries, he ruled.

The court gave the government two weeks to submit a proposal.

In a statement read on their behalf Friday, the migrants urged the U.S. and Salvadoran governments to comply with the ruling.

They said the court’s decision “sets a crucial precedent for protecting the rights of all migrants who leave their homes in difficult and vulnerable conditions and who, for the most part, are humble and hard-working families.”

One of the men involved, Arturo Suarez, 34, told AFP: “We want our names to be cleared and obviously for them to pay and try to repair what they did to us unjustly.”

Salvadoran President Nayib Bukele built CECOT to house criminals as part of his own war against gangs.

The Trump administration paid $6 million to El Salvador to keep Venezuelans behind bars, a move widely condemned by rights groups.

Caracas is investigating allegations of crimes against humanity.



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