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- Bukele proposes swap of deported Venezuelans for prisoners with Maduro
Bukele proposes swap of deported Venezuelans for prisoners with Maduro
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El Salvador's President Nayib Bukele has proposed a prisoner exchange with Venezuela. In return for the release of 252 Venezuelans currently detained in El Salvador's prison, Bukele is demanding that Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro release an equal number of "political prisoners". Bukele emphasizes that the Venezuelan prisoners have committed no crime, unlike many of the Venezuelans detained in El Salvador. Bukele also implies that the Venezuelan prisoners are being held for their opposition to Maduro's government, which he refers to as "electoral fraud". This proposal has drawn international attention, with El Salvador coming under scrutiny for accepting Venezuelans and Salvadorans deported by the US.
Mr. @NicolasMaduro, you have said on numerous occasions that you want the Venezuelans back and free. Unlike you, who have political prisoners, we don't have political prisoners. All the Venezuelans we have in custody were detained as part of an operation against gangs like the Tren de Aragua in the United States.
Also included are the nearly 50 detained citizens of other nationalities: American, German, Dominican, Argentine, Bolivian, Israeli, Chilean, Colombian, Ecuadorian, Spanish, French, Guyanese, Dutch, Iranian, Italian, Lebanese, Mexican, Peruvian, Puerto Rican, Ukrainian, Uruguayan, Portuguese, and Czech.
Radical Lunatic Democrats... are falsely making Kilmar Armando Abrego Garcia out to be a very sweet and innocent person, which is a total, blatant, and dangerous LIE.
WEAK and INEFFECTIVE Judges and Law Enforcement Officials who are allowing this sinister attack on our Nation to continue.
Immigration to the US
- US Supreme Court Upholds Block on Trump Deportations under Alien Enemies Act
- US Deports 2-Year-Old Citizen to Venezuela Without Proper Process
- Wisconsin judge indicted over allegations of aiding undocumented immigrant in evasion of immigration authorities
sources
- 1.The Times of India
- 2.South China Morning Post
- 3.CNN
- 4.France 24
- 5.Le Monde
- 6.The Korea Herald
- 7.Al Jazeera
- 8.The Guardian
- 9.Agence France-Presse
perspectives
- 1.US Foreign Policy
- 2.US under Donald Trump
- 3.US Politics
- 4.US under Joe Biden
- 5.Immigration to the US
- 6.Organized crime
- 7.Immigration
- 8.US-India relations
- 9.Mexico under Claudia Sheinbaum
- 10.India under Modi
- 11.United States–Mexico–Canada Agreement
- 12.Mexican Cartels
countries
- 1.Argentina
- 2.Bolivia, Plurinational State of
- 3.Chile
- 4.Colombia
- 5.Czechia
- 6.Germany
- 7.Dominican Republic
- 8.Ecuador
- 9.Spain
- 10.France
- 11.Guyana
- 12.Israel
organizations
- 1.Tren de Aragua
- 2.Center for the Confinement of Terrorism
- 3.Democratic Party
- 4.Mara Salvatrucha
- 5.US Supreme Court
- 6.White House
- 7.American Civil Liberties Union
- 8.Truth Social
- 9.Argentine Embassy
- 10.SAAB AB
- 11.Twitter/X
persons
- 1.Kilmar Abrego Garcia
- 2.Nayib Bukele
- 3.Donald Trump
- 4.Nicolás Maduro
- 5.Edmundo Gonzalez Urrutia
- 6.Rocio San Miguel
- 7.María Corina Machado
- 8.Rafael Tudares
- 9.Roland Carreno
- 10.Corina Parisca De Machado
- 11.Tarek William Saab
- 12.Chris Van Hollen