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46 deported Venezuelan migrants return to Trinidad and Tobago illegally - Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

FORTY-SIX Venezuelan migrants who were deported last month in a mass deportation have re-entered Trinidad and Tobago illegally.

Their attorneys have advised them to surrender to the police.

Attorneys Criston J Williams and Blaine Sobrian of the firm Quantum Legal wrote to Police Commissioner Erla Harewood-Christopher on Thursday to tell her of their clients’ actions.

Copies of the letter was also sent to the Director of Public Prosecutions, the Prime Minister, the UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR) and the Police Complaints Authority.

The return of the 46 follows that of Venezuelan refugee Juan Manuel Acosta, who returned to TT five days after he was expelled on August 12.

On Thursday, Acosta resettled in the US. He had been approved for resettlement there through the International Organisation for Migration (IOM).

Now, the attorneys for the 46 have again called on the CoP to investigate National Security Minister Fitzgerald Hinds for crimes against humanity for signing their deportation order.

They claim they were forced to sign deportation orders under threat of imprisonment and were not afforded the right, as asylum-seekers. to challenge their rejection as provided for under the Immigration Act.

“The complainants also wish to file complaints against the Minister in relation to offences under Sections 30A(1)(vii) and 30B of the Offences Against the Person Act. 4.43.”

They say the minister’s conduct caused them distress. Hinds and the Immigration Division were also accused of engaging in acts to “pervert the course of public justice.”

They argue that the "total bypassing of procedure under the Immigration Act by the minister and the Immigration Division to effect their hurried deportation was premeditated to obstruct a police investigation into the going-ons at the heliport and to conceal from the TT Police Service the commission of serious crimes perpetrated therein at the hands of the minister, Immigration Division and other servants of the State.

“They maintain that their deportation would and has made it virtually impossible, both practically and legally (to an extent), to make a complaint or give evidence of criminal conduct concerning the heliport without incurring severe prejudice. “

The attorneys called on Harewood-Christopher to “order, co-ordinate and oversee a criminal investigation, forthwith and without delay, into the Ministry of National Security and the Immigration Division concerning the report of the complainants alleging criminal behaviour by the Minister, the Immigration Division and/or immigration personnel.”

They also asked for a comprehensive report on the police investigations and for the commissioner to give reasons if there are no criminal investigations or if criminal charges are not laid against the minister.

Acosta and the 46 were among approximately 200 Venezuelans held in a raid at the Apex Bar in St James on July 9.

Some of them were ordered to be conditionally released by the court, and 98 of them were deported on August 12, including Acosta and the 46.

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