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No longer content to dump migrants into lifelong confinement in a Salvadoran slave-labor camp, the regime is now trying to ship some people to South Sudan, which is on the verge of another brutal civil war, but a federal judge in Boston is telling the regime to cut that crap out.
Last night N.M.'s attorneys were notified that the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) intended to remove him to South Sudan. N.M., a Burmese national with limited English proficiency, refused to sign the notice of removal to South Sudan which was provided to him only in English. Id. This morning, they learned from a detention officer via email that N.M. was removed this same morning to South Sudan. As with the motion for temporary restraining order that Plaintiffs filed not even two weeks ago, and which this Court agreed ought to not be necessary, this motion should also not be required as it blatantly defies this Court's PI to remove class members without a reasonable fear screening and a 15-day opportunity to submit a motion to reopen after any negative reasonable fear determination. Earlier this morning, class counsel received notification of a second class member, T.T.P., a national of Vietnam, who appears to have suffered the same fate 2 as N.M., as well as information that there were likely at least 10 other class members on the plane to South Sudan.