Home news Venezuela’s mother says a guy sent to Alsvador Mega-Zina from us

Venezuela’s mother says a guy sent to Alsvador Mega-Zina from us

0
Venezuela’s mother says a guy sent to Alsvador Mega-Zina from us


Nicole Collster and Gustavo Okando Alex

BBC

Bernd Debosman j RAR

BBC News, Washington DC

Nicole Collster/BBC Mondo Merelis Cassici LopezNicole Collster/BBC World

Merelis Lopez insists that his son is innocent and not a member of the gang

Francisco Garcia Casski, 24, was waiting for Saturday in a poor neighborhood of Marrakay, Venezuela.

He had migrated to the United States for 18 months, but told him he would be deported to Caracas, Venezuela’s capital, because he was illegally in the United States. They had spoken that morning, just before it was going to leave.

“I thought it was a good sign that he would be deported to Caracas,” he said. He wanted to be at home.

But he never arrived. And while watching a television report on Sunday, Casski was shocked to see his son, neither in the United States nor Venezuela, but 1,430 miles (2,300 kilometers) from Al-Salvador.

The video shows 238 Venezuelans sent by US authorities to the terrorist prison center, or Sikot, which has a large number of imprisonments. The man saw his bearded heads and clauses on their hands and feet.

The Trump administration says all the deportations were a member of the Tren de Araguan gang, who found himself in the White House. The strong multinational crime group Trump recently announced a foreign terrorist organization was accused of trafficking in sex, drug trafficking and killings at home and in major US cities.

A picture of prisoners sitting on a land in a white and short-sighted form and a white T-shirt. Their bearded heads are bowed for them so we don't see their faces. Yellow circle refers to Mr. Garcia

Garcia’s mother says she met in the picture

Cassic told the BBC that he was sure his son was among the detainees, even if no official lists had been published.

“That’s the person. He said, referring to a picture of a man sitting on a prison land, on a prison ground, a tattoo on his arm. “I’ll recognize the faces.

He also insists that he is innocent.

The videos show that the gang members have been deported by us in Al-Salvador Mega-Gell.

Immigration officials said the detainees were “detailed inspected” and confirmed as gang members before they were delivered to Al-Salvador. They said they used collected evidence during surveillance, police confrontation or testimony of the victims to give them a vessel.

“Our job is to send terrorists out before another person is raped or killed,” White House Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller said Wednesday.

Many of the deportations do not have a US crime record, but a US immigrant and customs official (ICE) recognized in court documents. And according to a law that was finally claimed during the war that they did not need to be charged with a crime, they were deported.

According to the Trump administration, those who have a criminal record have immigrants who have arrests on charges of murder, tracking and kidnappings to the occupation of homes and the management of a prostitution cell run by gangs, according to the Trump administration.

Nicole Collster/BBC Mondo Merelis Lopez watches television with her family in Maraca in Venezuela. Nicole Collster/BBC World

Mr. Garcia’s family was aware of his arrest in Alvador for the first time in Alvador in Alvador.

Nicole Collster/BBC Mondo Francisco Jose Garcia Casski wears a red shirt playing Bisbol. Nicole Collster/BBC World

His mother has said they are fleeing the economic and political crisis of Venezuela. In 2023, crossing to the United States

In the case of Mr. Garcia, his mother is at odds about the fact that his son was involved in criminal activities. “He left Venezuela in 2019, first for Peru, looking for new opportunities because the economic, political and social crisis has engulfed the country,” he said. In September 2023, they illegally crossed to the United States.

His mother hasn’t seen it directly for six years.

“He doesn’t belong to any criminal gang, neither in the United States nor in Venezuela… he’s not guilty,” Kasiki said. “What he became a barber.

“Unfortunately, he has a tattoo,” he said, adding that the rose and the names of family members who decorate his body led to his arrest and deportation. Thus, he and other members of his family recognized him from the deported photos of Al-Salvador.

A young man with a bearded and goat kneel on his knees, while a soldier holds his hand on his soil on his soil.

The photo was posted in the video by President Nayb Buckel, showing Mervin Yamart in The Cecout Mega-Prison in Alvador.

Several other families say they believe the deportations were mistakenly recognized as members of the Tren de Aragua gang because of their tattoos.

“That’s that person,” Casski said in tears in Marakay. “I wish it weren’t for him… he didn’t deserve to be moved there.

Mervin Yamart’s mother, 29, is also identified in the video.

“I threw myself on the ground and said God couldn’t do this to my son,” he told the BBC at his home in the Los Pscaders neighborhood.

Like Mrs. Cassiki, she refuses her son to be related to the beast. He had left his homeland and traveled to the United States through the Darin Gap. Andy Javier Pirozo, 30 years old; and Rengu Rincon, 39 years.

The BBC spoke to their families and friends and said they saw the four in the videos of Al-Salvador prison.

Mr. Yamart’s mother said her son worked in a Tortila factory, sometimes working 12 hours. He played football with his friends on Sundays, all of whom had a house in Dallas, Texas.

“He is a good young man. There is a mistake,” he said.

‘We are scared.

President Trump invited a hundreds of years of law on foreign enemies in 1798 to deport the men without legal action in the United States, saying they were members of the Tren Deraguan gangs.

Despite the US government assurances that the deportation has been detailed, this move has had a cold effect on many Venezuelans and Venezuela in the United States, which fears Trump’s use of the law would lead to more accusations of Venezuela and quickly deportation without any conviction.

“Of course we are afraid. We are scared,” said Adellis Ferro, executive director of the Venezuelan-American conference, a defense group. “We want every TDA member to pay for their crimes. But we don’t know what the criteria are.

“They (Venziulans) live in unknown times,” he said. “They don’t know what to make – even those who have documents and have been here for years.

Ms. Ferro’s concerns were echoed by Brian de La Vega, a prominent lawyer in Florida, born in Venezuela and veteran military Peshmergas born in Venezuela.

Many of his drives are in the Miami region, including Doral, a neighborhood of sometimes taking into account the name “Daralzwella” for the great Venezuelan residents.

“Most Venezuelans are trying to do something. They are afraid they will return to their homeland,” Mr. de La Vega told the BBC. “The main concern for me is how they introduce these organs. The standard is very low.

Many Venezuela’s exile in the United States – especially southern Florida – widely support Trump, who has taken a tough stance for the left government of Venezuela President Nicolas Maduro, many of whom have fled.

In February, however, the Trump administration ended the temporal state of TPS for Venezuela, which protected many from deportation. The program will officially end on April 7 and can affect about 350,000 Venezuelans living in the United States.

“Trump’s speeches have always been strong about the Venezuelan regime, especially during the election campaign,” he said. “I don’t think people are waiting for all this.

Pennsylvania’s Pennsylvania, who was a pro-Trump-based Trump, told the BBC, while he was stable in his support for the president, but there were some concerns about deportation to Alsvador and the end of the TPS diseases.

“I certainly hope they will be raging on the deportation of Tren de Aragua, especially for Al-Salvador’s prison,” he said.

Among those who have been arrested until the end of TPS, the recent deportation is a 25-year-old Venezuelan man who has asked only Yılber, who arrived in the United States in 2022 after a long-term trip to Central America and Mexico.

He is in the United States now – but he is not sure what will come after that.

“I left Venezuela because of the repression, and insecurity. I had a neighborhood in Caracas,” he said. “Now I don’t know what’s going on here.

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here