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Eswatini Court Rules First Trump Deportees in Jail Have Right to Lawyer

JOHANNESBURG, April 10 (Reuters) – A court ⁠in ⁠Eswatini has ruled that ⁠the first five migrants the Trump administration sent to ​the African kingdom have a right to a lawyer, after they were denied legal ‌representation on their transfer from ‌the U.S. to a Swazi jail in July.

The court rejected a ⁠government argument ⁠that the detainees had not specifically requested the human rights ​lawyer Sibusiso Nhlabatsi represent them. Nhlabatsi has been trying to fight the migrants’ case without access to them.

“There can be no real harm in granting the Respondent ​access to the detainees,” the three judges ruled in a decision reviewed ⁠by ⁠Reuters.

“If they do not ⁠wish to ​see the Respondent (they can) tell this to the Respondent to his face,” they ​said.

The detainees are ⁠among at least 19 third-country migrants – from various countries in Africa, Asia and the Americas – that Trump’s administration deported to Eswatini as part of its crackdown on immigration. Other countries have also hosted migrants deported from the ⁠U.S.

The judgment only applies to the first five arrivals, as the challenge ⁠was first launched on their behalf, although it could set a precedent for the others. Eswatini, an absolute monarchy ruled by King Mswati III, has released only two of the detainees so far, a Jamaican man last year and a Cambodian last month.

Lawyers in Eswatini and the U.S. have challenged the legality of the $5.1 million deal between the two countries, which has resulted in deportees being ⁠incarcerated in the southern African nation despite having already served sentences for crimes committed on U.S. soil.

The high court last month threw out a case filed by a local human rights lawyer that ​challenged the deal itself, though the lawyer has appealed.

(Reporting by ​Tim Cocks; Editing by Kate Mayberry)

Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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