Rwanda is now accepting Deportees from Trump Administration

African Peasant

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This is why I’m not a staunch pan-Africanist. You can’t come say this when Congo also has its own fukkery it engaged in with Rwanda prior to these current events as @papa pimp pointed out
What fukkery? Rwanda has been invading Congo and funding rebels for 30 years causing millions of death?
When did Congo do the same to Rwanda? To gain what? Rwanda has nothing Congo can envy.
I could've somehow agreed with you if you talked about the role Zaire played in Angola in the 70's...

But let say you right, it won't change the substance of my statement. It will just mean that both Congo and Rwanda are culprit of the same thing.

My idea is pretty simple: you can't claim to care about the black race and champion a group of black people attacking another group of black people. And you don't need to be a panafricanst to adhere to that principle.

Of course, one can also say he does not care about the black race and all he cares about is his nation/group/person. All I'm saying is that we need to be consistent.
 

bnew

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Rwanda confirms talks with US about taking in migrants​


Minister Olivier Nduhungirehe talking.


Image source, Reuters

Image caption, Rwandan Foreign Minister Olivier Nduhungirehe says that Rwanda believes in giving migrants "another chance"Article information

  • Author, Cecilia Macaulay & Didier Bikorimana
  • Role, BBC News & BBC Great Lakes service
  • 5 May 2025, 12:25 BST

    Updated 9 hours ago

Rwanda is in the "early stage" of talks with the Trump administration to accept migrants deported by the US, the East African country's Foreign Affairs Minister Olivier Nduhungirehe has said.

His comments come after US Secretary of State Marco Rubio said last month that Washington was "actively searching" for countries that would take in "some of the most despicable human beings".

Nduhungirehe said the talks were "not new to us" as Rwanda had previously agreed to accept migrants deported by the UK.

However, the UK abandoned the scheme, which faced numerous legal challenges, after Sir Keir Starmer's Labour government took office last July.

Speaking to Rwandan TV on Sunday, Nduhungirehe said the government was in the "spirit" of giving "another chance to migrants who have problems across the world".

Nduhungirehe added that the talks with the US were continuing, and it was too early to predict their outcome.

Since coming to office in January, US President Donald Trump has focused on speeding up the removal of undocumented migrants, with the promise of "mass deportations".

In February, El Salvador offered to take in criminals deported from the US, including those with US citizenship, and house them in its mega-jail.

Salvadorean President Nayib Bukele said his government would do so "in exchange for a fee".

Panama and Costa Rica have also taken in migrants deported from the US.

Last week an unnamed Rwandan official told the Washington Post that the country was "open" to taking in more migrants expelled from the US, after having accepted an Iraqi in March.

The official added that talks with the US started shortly after Trump's inauguration in January.

Rwanda has previously been criticised for its human rights record, including the risk that those sent to the East African nation could be deported again to countries where they may face danger.

However, Rwanda says it is a safe place for refugees.
 
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