Jamaica in talks to accept third-country migrants deported from US


KINGSTON, June 16 (Reuters) - Jamaica ⁠is in talks with Washington over accepting third-country migrants deported ⁠by the United States, the country's Deputy Prime Minister ‌and Security Minister Horace Chang said in a statement on Tuesday.

The deal remains to be finalized, he said.

• U.S. President Donald Trump's administration has overseen a mass ​deportation drive, sealing deals with several countries ⁠to act as hosts for ⁠deportees of third nationalities often in exchange for payment, with El ⁠Salvador ‌the most well-known example for holding over 200 Venezuelans in an anti-terrorism prison for four months.

• "This is an MOU (memorandum ⁠of understanding) and not a binding agreement," Chang ​said, adding that "respect ‌for human rights remains a central principle."

• "Lessons were taken" from ⁠similar arrangements in ​the region, including the Caribbean nations of Belize, Dominica, Antigua and Barbuda and St. Kitts and Nevis, he added.

• Under the deal, Jamaica ⁠would act as a transit country for ​U.S. deportees, transferring up to 25 people every fortnight and hosting no more than 10 migrants at a time as it arranges travel ⁠to another country or their home nation.

• The U.S. State Department did not immediately reply to a request for comment.

• The deal was previously reported by the Jamaica Gleaner, which said up to ​10,000 deportees could be accepted under the ⁠deal. Chang said Jamaica had not agreed to such a quota.

• The ​U.S. said it would support all associated ‌costs and related arrangements, Chang said, ​noting people with criminal backgrounds will not be accepted.

(Reporting by Zahra Burton and Sarah Morland; Editing by Christian Schmollinger)

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