Cambodian Trump deportee becomes second to be released by Eswatini, lawyers say


FILE PHOTO: Protesters hold placards as lead applicant and lawyer Mzwandile Masuku addresses them outside the court, after today's hearing was postponed, in Mbabane, Eswatini, August 22, 2025. Activists are challenging a secretive agreement with former U.S. President Donald Trump's administration to accept third-country deportees, which they argue is unconstitutional. REUTERS/Zakhele Mabuza/File Photo

MBABANE, March ⁠26 (Reuters) - A Cambodian man whom the U.S. Trump administration deported ⁠to Eswatini after he finished serving a 15-year sentence for ‌attempted murder has been released, his lawyer said, the second of at least 19 deportees sent to the country to be freed.

Eswatini authorities released Pheap Rom from prison ​on Wednesday, while on Thursday he was ⁠in the process of being ⁠repatriated to Cambodia, his lawyer Tin Nguyen told Reuters.

A spokesperson for Eswatini's ⁠correctional ‌services did not respond to a request for comment, but two legal sources in the country, who declined to ⁠be named because they were not authorised to speak, ​confirmed his release.

Earlier ‌this month, Eswatini said it had received four more third-country ⁠deportees from the ​U.S, in accordance with a roughly $5 million deal between the two countries.

The only other to have gotten out was a Jamaican man repatriated in ⁠September.

Eswatini is one of several African countries ​that have made deals with the U.S. to receive third-country deportees, as part of the Trump administration's crackdown on illegal immigration.

Rights groups have strongly ⁠condemned the policy of deporting immigrants to third countries, where some have been jailed without charges and others forcibly returned to states which they had fled for fear of persecution.

The U.S. Department of Homeland ​Security said in June that the deportees sent ⁠to Eswatini were "so uniquely barbaric that their own countries won't take them ​back." But Eswatini has said it is ‌not true that some of the ​countries rejected their citizens, and that it aims to repatriate all of them.

(Reporting by Tim Cocks; Editing by Arun Koyyur)

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